Undergraduate

TAPS 20390/30390 Dramaturgy Cohort

Interested in peaking behind the curtain of a professional theater company? Follow along with the conceptual questions and artistic decisions for two productions, one at Court Theatre and one at Steppenwolf. Activities will include visiting rehearsals, meeting with artists, and providing dramaturgical research and discussion for upcoming productions of Miss Julie and Catch As Catch Can. We will also experiment with active dramaturgy methods ourselves. This course is aimed at students who want to put theories of performance into practice in real time, alongside a professional production process. 

2025-2026 Winter
Category
Dramaturgy
History & Theory

TAPS 25805/35805 Blackness in Latin America: Popular Culture, Performance and Visual Art, and Discourses of Mestizaje

(SPAN 24550/34550)

The course examines how blackness has been both constructed and reimagined across Latin America and the Caribbean through an exploration of the performance and cultural practices of Afro-Latin communities. We treat popular and performance traditions as a crucial terrain for discerning how Black people across the region navigate discourses of racial democracy, mestizaje, multiculturalism, and racial fraternity even as they faced the realities of racism in individual nations. The course examines imaginations of blackness in hip hop, reggaetón, rumba, folklore, carnivals, and visual art in varied sites such as Cuba, Puerto Rico, Peru, Colombia, and Brazil. Grounded in Black and Diaspora Studies, the writings of Frantz Fanon, W.E.B. Dubois, Paul Gilroy and others will serve as theoretical touchstones for placing these forms and lived realities in diasporic context. We will also engage the work of noted and upcoming Black artists from the region.

Undergraduates must be in their 3rd or 4th year.

While the course will be taught in English, please note that many of the performances studied will be in Spanish.

2025-2026 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 10800 Contemporary Dance Practices

This studio-based course with a seminar component offers an overview of the formal practices and contemporary trends that shape dance as an art form. The class is designed for students who seek to gain a working knowledge of dance and deepen their physical skills. A range of contemporary dance forms and practices will be covered. Topics may include modern dance, hip hop, partnering techniques, social dance forms, improvisation, somatic practices, dance composition, and more. Lectures, viewings, and discussion will support experiential practice components. No previous experience with dance or performance is required. This course meets the general education requirement in the arts.

2025-2026 Winter
Category
Dance & Movement
College Core

TAPS 27850 Immersive Sound Design for Live Performance

(MADD 20850)

In film, sound design is expressive, immersive, and dense, but once complete it’s fixed in time forever. This course will explore ways to translate the technical and narrative approaches of cinematic sound design to the dynamic context of live performance (dance, theater, puppetry, etc.). Using a variety of tools and practices from Ableton Live to field recording, students will learn how to create cinematic sonic experiences that are responsive to and imbued with liveness. Final projects will culminate in an evening of live sound-based performances.

2025-2026 Spring
Category
Design & Production
Media Arts

TAPS 21520 Acting Shakespeare

This acting course will introduce students to the fundamentals of performing early modern drama. Working with plays by Shakespeare, John Lyly, Christopher Marlowe, Margaret Cavendish and other playwrights of the period, we will draw on performance techniques developed by Shakespeare & Company, which focus on the voice, physical gesture, collaboration, and play. Required readings and viewing assignments will supplement our class work by providing context, inspiration, and an introduction to a variety of artists. The course will culminate in a performance of scenes and monologues.

2025-2026 Winter
Category
Acting

TAPS 24118/34118 The Score

(ARTV 24118/34118)

The performance score is a visual/textual work unto itself. Scores also provide performers and audiences with a language to understand the work. In this way, scores are documents of performative world-building while at the same time offering pathways into those worlds. This is a course about producing writing, drawing, and trace-making for the purpose of some other action – the performance of some unknown. Students will consider, in particular, how diasporic artists and writers have used writing, drawing, and mark-making as tools for inhabiting and re-enlivening performances of the past, theoretical performances, and those performances difficult to transcribe or translate. Students will have several opportunities over the course of the term to create and perform scores including their own in various media.

Anna Martine Whitehead
2025-2026 Winter
Category
Creating & Devising

TAPS 20350/40350 Staging the University

(ENGL 22560/42560)

This course will cover the rich representation of university life in non-professional Renaissance drama (including student-written plays, hazing plays, moralities, and satirical pamphlets, as well as intriguing fragments from lost plays), and the tantalizing glimpses this subject that the public stage offer. Plays include Love's Labour's Lost, The Parnassus Plays, Michaelmas Term, The Marriage of Wit & Science, and several neo-Latin plays in English translation. It will also provide a deep dive into the student scrapbooks of the late 16th / early 17th centuries; students will assemble their own album amicorum based on this curious and compelling form of self-documentation. Half of the course meetings will be taking place in the Regenstein Library's Special Collections.

2025-2026 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 28473/38373 US Imperialism and Cultural Practice in Latin America

This course examines the ways histories of US intervention in Latin America have been engaged in cultural practice. We assess the history of US intervention by reading primary documents alongside cultural artifacts including film, performance and visual art, song, music, and poetry. The course begins with the Cuban revolution and ends with the ongoing crisis in Puerto Rico.

2025-2026 Autumn
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 24090 Celebrity Cultures: Divas, Queers, and Drags in Latin America

This course takes students on a journey into the dazzling world of divas, queers, and drag performers who reshaped Latin America's cultural, social, and political repertoires. From Eva Perón's iconic political mythology and María Félix's femme fatale allure to the radical defiance of Pedro Lemebel and the cosmic magnetism of Walter Mercado, we will explore how these larger-than-life figures resisted and undermined heteronormative and misogynistic regimes. Engaging critical theory, queer studies, and aesthetic analysis, the course invites students to engage with the commodification of celebrity in the culture industry, the performative dynamics of identity, and queer culture's fascination with camp, glamour, and abjection. Revisiting concepts like the society of the spectacle and hyperreal personas, students will uncover how these icons transformed the public sphere and disrupted hegemonic power structures. The course also examines celebrity labor as affective production and the participatory cultures that turn fandom into a consumer community, and into a nostalgic and repetitive ritual in the context of digital neoliberalism. Through discussions, close readings of critical texts, and multimedia explorations of films and performances, students will learn how divas, queers, and drag performers redefined aesthetic innovation and became fearless agents of political subversion in the region and beyond. The course will be taught in Spanish and English.

Carlos Halaburda
2025-2026 Autumn
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 28320/38320 The Mind as Stage: Podcasting

(MADD 23820)

Audio storytelling insinuates itself into the day-to-day unlike other narrative forms. People listen to podcasts while they do the dishes, drive to work, or walk the dog. In this hands-on course, we will learn to produce a podcast from idea to final sound mix, and explore the unique opportunities that the podcast form affords the storyteller. Students will complete several short audio exercises, and one larger podcast project. The class will be held remotely, with an emphasis on remote recording techniques and what it means to document this moment using tools of non-fiction, fiction, and oral history.

2025-2026 Winter
Category
Media Arts
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