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Jul 17, 2025
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THEA 480 Theories of Performance Studies What is performance? What does performance do? Why is performance classified as a central element of political, social and cultural life? How can performance be considered a research method? In answering these questions, this course introduces students to performance studies, an interdisciplinary field that investigates how performance operates out of the confines of the stage (or camera). Specifically, this course offers a critical survey of the genealogies as well as foundational theories and theorists of performance studies including Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Schechner, Dwight Conquergood, Ervin Goffman, Victor Turner, Judith Butler, E. Patrick Johnson, D. Soyini Madison, Robin Bernstein, and José Esteban Muñoz. Students will examine a broad range of performances both on and off the stage from rituals and storytelling to live and recorded performances, and from political speeches and protests to human interaction and individual acts of identity expression. Additionally, we will apply analytical frameworks of performance theory to sites and happenings including theatre, religious events, social media, community gatherings, and sporting events as well as examine people’s habitual patterns and behaviors of everyday life as performance.
Repeatable: N Formerly THEA 280 DEI Prerequisites CULS 101 Introduction to Cultural Studies or CULS 101H Introduction to Cultural Studies: Honors or THEA 106 Theatre Survey I: Global Drama and THEA 111 Theatre Foundation I: Theatre Making Requirements Sophomore Standing or Above (SO) Minimum Credits 3 Maximum Credits 3
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