Kate Flaherty Kate Flaherty i(A141831 works by) (a.k.a. Kathryn. Flaherty)
Gender: Female
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Works By

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1 y separately published work icon Touring Performance and Global Exchange 1850-1960 : Making Tracks Gilli Bush-Bailey (editor), Kate Flaherty (editor), Abingdon : Routledge , 2024 27470907 2024 anthology criticism

'This collection uncovers connections and coincidences that challenge the old stories of pioneering performers who crossed the Atlantic and Pacific oceans from the mid-nineteenth to the mid-twentieth century.

'It investigates songlines, drama, opera, music theatre, dance, and circus—removing traditional boundaries that separate studies of performance, and celebrating difference and transformation in style, intention, and delivery. Well known, or obscure, travelling performers faced dangers at sea and hazardous journeys across land. Their tracks, made in pursuit of fortune and fame, intersected with those made by earlier storytellers in search for food. Touring Performance and Global Exchange takes a fresh look at such tracks—the material remains—demonstrating that moving performance does far more than transfer repertoires and people; it transforms them. Touring performance has too often beenconceived in diasporic terms, as a fixed product radiating out from a cultural centre. This collection maps different patterns—ones that comprise reversed flows, cross currents, and continually proliferating centres of meaning in complex networks of global exchange.

'This collection will be of great interest to scholars and students in theatre, music, drama studies, and cultural history.' (Publication summary)

1 When No One Remembers Kate Flaherty , 2015 single work short story
— Appears in: Antipodean SF , February no. 200 2015;
1 [Review] The Empire Actors : Stars of Australasian Costume Drama 1890s-1920s Kate Flaherty , 2011 single work review
— Appears in: JASAL , vol. 11 no. 2 2011;

— Review of The Empire Actors : Stars of Australasian Costume Drama 1890s-1920s Veronica Kelly , 2009 single work criticism
1 4 y separately published work icon Ours As We Play It : Australia Plays Shakespeare Kate Flaherty , Crawley : UWA Publishing , 2011 Z1802854 2011 single work criticism 'Shakespeare's plays are permeable to the contexts in which they are performed: they take on and speak to local concerns. Early modern audiences would have experienced the humour and resonance of local identification with the plays just as we do, although the content of that identification in Australia today is uniquely our own. Ours As We Play It takes a close look at several contemporary Australian productions of three Shakespeare plays; exploring masculinity and madness in Hamlet, the role of landscape and the multiple roles of Rosalind in As You Like It, and hierarchies of gender and social order re-imagined in relation to Australian understandings of power in A Midsummer Night's Dream.' Source: http://uwap.uwa.edu.au/ (Sighted 01/09/2011).
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