y separately published work icon Australasian Drama Studies periodical issue   peer reviewed assertion
Issue Details: First known date: 2018... no. 72 April 2018 of Australasian Drama Studies est. 1982 Australasian Drama Studies
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Contents

* Contents derived from the , 2018 version. Please note that other versions/publications may contain different contents. See the Publication Details.
Harry Lyons Is 'Here, There and Everywhere' : Australia's Late-19th-Century Global Entertainment Broker, Gillian Arrighi , single work criticism

'This article brings to light the career of Australian-born theatrical agent Harry Lyons (1841–1913) whose entrepreneurial activities span the period now attributed by historians as the first phase of globalisation (from the mid-nineteenth century to the outbreak of World War I). Travelling internationally in pursuit of his commercial speculations, Lyons introduced Australian audiences to some of the biggest international stars of the era. Revealing that Lyons’ commercial interests covered the cultural spectrum from high art (opera and Shakespeare)to popular entertainments (circus, bicycle meets, ethnographic installations), the author examines Lyons’ eclectic career within the context of modernity, arguing he was one of the newly emergent middlemen of culture who influenced popular consumption and the making of taste. Progressing in tandem with the modernities of his era, Lyons’ long career provides a useful lens through which to reconsider the expansion and diversification of late-colonial theatrical activity, as well as the ways that theatrical production in Australia absorbed international influences and contributed to trends internationally.' (Publication abstract)

(p. 1-30)
Postcard from the Edge : Tom Holloway's beyond the Neck and the Limits of Verbatim, Caroline Wake , single work criticism

'When the New South Wales Board of Studies put Tom Holloway’s Beyond the Neck (2007) on the list of prescribed texts for the Year 12 Verbatim Theatre elective, they seemed to be wilfully ignoring the playwright’s statement that the play is not verbatim. On the one hand, the lack of vernacular speech and characters that correspond to real-life people would seem to confirm Holloway’s argument. Conversely, the play’s reliance on interviews, community consultation, bottom-up history and mode of diegetic theatricality would seem to support the Board of Studies’ decision. This article argues that this difference of opinion is due, in part, to a difference of definition: whereas Holloway conceives of verbatim as a genre, the Board of Studies sees it as a practice. To contemplate verbatim as a practice opens the way for new research across theatre, performance, dance, television and film.'  (Publication abstract)

(p. 100-125)
A Review of Young People and the Arts : An Agenda for Change, Sarah Austin , single work review

'During her seventeen years as Artistic Director and CEO of Polyglot Theatre, Sue Giles has led significant shifts in Polyglot’s creative practice. As Vice-President of ASSITEJ, she has been a remarkable advocate for young audiences. Giles’ Platform Paper A Review of Young People and the Arts: An Agenda for Change clearly articulates recent developments in theatre-making by and for young people and children. Her survey encompasses the broad range of practices within this field, including youth arts, theatre for young audiences, and work made by professional contemporary artists with children and young people for adult audiences.'  (Introduction)

(p. 278-284)
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