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Campus Protests, Casting, and Institutionalized Violence: The Unique Role of the Theatre Department in Institutions of Higher Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2016

Extract

In looking forward to the important issues of this coming decade, we need only turn to the events of the past year for a sense of what is at stake for theatre, performance, and performance pedagogy. Last year, student activists protested racism on college and university campuses across the United States. At Yale, students protested the hostile racial climate on campus following several incidents, including a professor's dismissal of concerns about racist Halloween costumes, numerous swastika graffiti, and the explicit exclusion of black women from fraternity events. At the University of Missouri, the student group Concerned Student 1950—named for the year the first black students were admitted to the university—called for the resignation of university president, Tim Wolfe, citing the administration's inaction in the face of numerous racist incidents on campus. At Ithaca College, Claremont McKenna University, the University of Kansas, and many other colleges and universities across the United States, students held rallies, performed die-ins, and signed petitions in support of students at the University of Missouri and Yale and to call attention to inequality on their own campuses. Set against the backdrop of Ferguson and an increased awareness of institutionalized violence against black and brown bodies, these events remind us that colleges and universities have always been sites where racial discrimination and inequality have been both perpetuated and protested.

Type
Essays: A Call for the Future
Copyright
Copyright © American Society for Theatre Research 2016 

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References

Endnotes

1. Brandi Wilkins Catanese, The Problem of the Color[blind]: Racial Transgression and the Politics of Black Performance (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2011), 3.

2. Patricia Ybarra, “A Message from TAPS Chair, Dr. Patricia Ybarra,” Department of Theatre Arts & Performance Studies at Brown University website, www.brown.edu/academics/theatre-arts-performance-studies/news/2015-12/message-taps-chair-dr-patricia-ybarra, accessed 29 March 2016.

3. Solga, Kim, “Toward the Activist Classroom,” Canadian Theatre Review 147 (Summer 2011): 34 CrossRefGoogle Scholar, at 4; online at www.utpjournals.press/doi/pdf/10.3138/ctr.147.3, accessed 25 May 2016.