Fr. 23.90

Moving the Centre - Two Plays: Small Axe & Freedom Singer

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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Moving the Centre is a two-play anthology exploring the problems and possibilities of verbatim theatre and undertake questions of justice, identity, and the history all around us.


About the author










Andrew Kushnir is an award-winning playwright, director, dramaturge, and performer who lives in Toronto. He is the artistic director of the socially engaged theatre company Project: Humanity, a leading developer of verbatim theatre in Canada. His plays include The Middle Place, Small Axe, Wormwood, The Gay Heritage Project (with Paul Dunn and Damien Atkins), Freedom Singer (with Khari Wendell McClelland), and Towards Youth: a play on radical hope. His work has been especially supported by Tarragon Theatre, the Theatre Centre, Theatre Passe Muraille, Canadian Stage, Buddies in Bad Times, Crow's Theatre, the Summerworks Festival, the Stratford Festival, and Dr. Kathleen Gallagher's Drama Research. In 2021, Andrew released This Is Something Else, a theatre history investigative podcast series, which he created for the Arts Club in Vancouver. He is a graduate of the University of Alberta and a Loran Scholar.

Summary

Moving the Centre explores the work of two theatre artists who dare, fumble, and persist in bringing audiences into a space where we can all listen differently. The two plays it includes — Small Axe and Freedom Singer — lean into the problems and possibilities of verbatim theatre to engage questions of justice and identity and the complex history all around us. Originally developed and produced by Toronto’s socially engaged theatre company Project: Humanity, these plays explore the power of recorded “real-life” encounters as a way for artists and the public to re-examine our defining narratives.

Small Axe charts the quest of a queer white playwright, Andrew Kushnir, who – because of an unsettling moment with a friend – feels a pull towards investigating homophobia in Jamaica. What starts as an artist researching an injustice to which he feels some kinship, evolves into a startling excavation of self and the stories we claim of others. To whom does an injustice “belong”? Through a constellation of exchanges – with activists, refugees, priests and ministers, journalists, fellow artists, Pride Festival revellers, and many Black queer people, Small Axe invites us to sit with our differences in order to discover how intricately connected we are.

Freedom Singer is a musical/verbatim theatre hybrid, constructed from hard-won archival material and family lore, documenting playwright Khari Wendell McClelland’s search for his ancestral grandmother Kizzy and the songs she may have sung during her escape through the Underground Railroad. For him, the “songs are like maps” leading back to the past, the enduring impacts of slavery and our capacity to lovingly reunite with denied histories.
With an opening essay by Kushnir and a concluding essay by McClelland, the book’s literal centre (between the plays) is a verbatim dialogue where the two discuss the white gaze vs. Black “looking back,” theatre-as-a-practice, and how centring caring and equitable relationships is what can make this kind of challenging theatre more ethical, more viable, and more truthful. Governor General Literary Award-winning poet Cecily Nicholson provides a powerful foreword.

Foreword

  • Reviews in national and local media
  • Paid premium placement in bookstores
  • Publicity and promotion in conjunction with the author's speaking engagements
  • Social media campaign: LibraryThing, Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads
  • Promotion on the Talon website (www.talonbooks.com)
  • Product details

    Authors Andrew Kushnir, Khari Wendell McClelland, Andrew Kushnir, Khari Wendell McClelland, Khari Wendell McLelland
    Publisher Ingram Publishers Services
     
    Languages English
    Product format Paperback / Softback
    Released 18.10.2022
     
    EAN 9781772013948
    ISBN 978-1-77201-394-8
    No. of pages 208
    Dimensions 140 mm x 216 mm x 14 mm
    Weight 210 g
    Subjects Fiction > Poetry, drama
    Humanities, art, music > Art > Theatre, ballet

    PERFORMING ARTS / Monologues & Scenes, Acting techniques, DRAMA / LGBTQ+

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