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Theatrical Jazz: Performance, Àse, and the Power of the Present Moment (Black Performance and Cultural Criticism)

Theatrical Jazz: Performance, Àse, and the Power of the Present Moment (Black Performance and Cultural Criticism)

Current price: $42.84
Publication Date: January 8th, 2023
Publisher:
Ohio State University Press
ISBN:
9780814252079
Pages:
392

Description

Omi Osun Joni L. Jones provides the first full-length study of an artistic form, the theatrical jazz aesthetic, that draws on the jazz principles of ensemble—the break, the bridge, and the blue note. Theatrical Jazz:  Performance, À??, and the Power of the Present Moment is a study of the use of jazz aesthetics in theatre as created by major practitioners of the form, giving particular attention to three innovative artists: Laurie Carlos, Daniel Alexander Jones, and Sharon Bridgforth.
 
Theatrical Jazz examines how artists are made and how artists make art. In charting their overlapping artistic genealogies, the book also discusses the work of veteran artists Aishah Rahman, Robbie McCauley, Sekou Sundiata, Ntozake Shange, and Erik Ehn, as well as the next generation of theatrical jazz innovators, Grisha Coleman, Walter Kitundu, Florinda Bryant, and Zell Miller III. Using autocritography as a primary methodology, the author draws on her role as performer, collaborator, audience/witness, and dramaturg in theatrical jazz, and her experiences with Yoruba spiritual traditions, to excavate the layers and nuances of this performance form.  Jones’s use of performative writing, a blend of intellectual, artistic, and sensory experiences, allows scholars and students not only to read but also to “hear” the principles of theatrical jazz on the page.
 

About the Author

Omi Osun Joni L. Jones is associate professor of African and African diaspora studies at University of Texas at Austin.

Praise for Theatrical Jazz: Performance, Àse, and the Power of the Present Moment (Black Performance and Cultural Criticism)

“Omi Osun Joni L. Jones details a fascinating interconnection between Yoruba spirit practices and theatrical jazz art-making. In graceful and stunningly clear prose, Jones shows exactly how late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century black performers have molded American theater to manifest the critical, affirming, transformative characteristics of ritual.” —Stephanie Batiste, University of California, Santa Barbara

“This is a stunning book, beautifully written and rare (but abundantly necessary) in its tribute to black intellectual and performance traditions and in its method of employing jazz theatricality—the ‘freedom place’—as a theory and method in broadening and enlightening the implications of the black queer body.” —D. Soyini Madison, Northwestern University