TAPS

TAPS 26290/36290 Mapping Black Social Dance: Hip-Hop and House in the Community and Onstage

(CRES 26290; MUSI 23620)

This hybrid studio/seminar course offers an overview of the formal techniques, cultural contexts, and social trends that shape current Black social and vernacular dance practices. Modules will be built around Black social culture by looking at key histories and theories around Black dance, music and other cultural aesthetics from hip hop to house. As part of our exploration, we will cover themes such as: the Great Migration, the range of Black social dance forms from blues, jazz, disco, and dancehall that have influenced the evolution of hip hop and house on global scale; and the spectrum of social spaces from clubs to lounges and public events that have been critical to preserving Black cultural heritage and creating safe spaces for belonging and flourishing. Selected readings and viewings will supplement movement practice to give historical, cultural, and political context. 

2021-2022 Spring
Category
Dance & Movement
History & Theory

TAPS 16004 Protest Puppetry: Materializing American Publicness

(ENGL 16004)

This course will explore the structural dynamics of protests through a close examination of giant puppets. We will engage with both practices and theories of protest puppetry. You will learn how to craft insurgent objects out papier maché and other found materials. We will think through this practice alongside theories of the public sphere and ethnographies of protests, uprisings and social movements (on the left and the right) from the 1960s to the present day. Rather than maintain the division between theory and practice, we will investigate the ways in which social movements mobilize theory as liberatory practice and how the practice of "puppetganda" generates theories of publicity from the mechanical and technical demands it makes on its puppeteers, participants and spectators. We will study specific protest events, from pioneers of the artform like Bread and Puppet in the 1960s to the height of protest puppetry during the environmental and global justice movements in the 1980s-2000s. We will ask why protest puppets were especially popular during the rise of neoliberalism and ultimately examine their usefulness in today's political climate in the context of the Black Lives Matter movement and Black uprising as well as the alt-right "rally."

2020-2021 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 41450 Peach Blossom Fan: Theater, History, and Politics

(EALC 41450)

This seminar probes the interplay of history, politics, and theatricality in Kong Shangren's Peach Blossom Fan, his dramatic masterpiece of 1699, which brilliantly depicts the fall of the Ming dynasty in 1644-1645 on multiple social, cultural, and ritual fronts, from the pleasure quarters and the imperial court to the Confucian Temple and the battlefield. Issues to be addressed include: the representation and reassessment of late Ming entertainment culture--courtesans, actors, storytellers, musicians, booksellers, painters; metatheatricality; memory and commemoration; props and material culture; the dissemination of news and (mis)information; the reenactment of the past on the stage, as we contextualize Peach Blossom Fan within the early Qing literary and theatrical world in which it was created and performed. We'll also examine the interplay of history, politics, and theatricality in the modern reception of the play by analyzing its modern and contemporary incarnations in spoken drama, feature film, and different operatic genres.

Reading knowledge of modern and classical Chinese is desirable but not required. The course is open to MAPH students as well as PhD students.

2020-2021 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 22900 Intro to Theater and Performance Studies

This course is designed to introduce students to foundational concepts and critical skills relevant to the study of theater and performance. In addition to wide-ranging readings and discussions, students will attend a variety of performances and screenings representing a cross-section of genres, interpretive styles, and institutional settings. Although the course will be directed by Prof. Trent, it will be divided into discrete units, each led by a different instructor from the TAPS teaching staff. Thus, students will gain exposure to a variety of teaching styles, areas of expertise, and approaches to the field. The course is open to all undergraduate students as an elective; it also serves as a required course for all TAPS majors.

2020-2021 Winter
Category
Major requirement

TAPS 22460 The Black Stage: History and Practice

(CRES 23460)

In this course students will analyze, critique, and produce dramatic work fueled by the question: What makes theatre Black and how can drama be utilized to affirm, celebrate, and amplify the specific and heterogeneous experiences of Black folks? Though our inquiry will be guided by our dramaturgical work on Court Theatre's summer 2021 production of Othello, we will also rigorously study and analyze other texts, productions, and companies--both contemporary and historic. Our course aim is to hone our ability not just to make our own creative work but also to think critically about the work of others.

2020-2021 Winter
Category
Creating & Devising
History & Theory

TAPS 28360/38360 Screendance: Movement and New Media

(MAAD 23860, CMST 28360)

This course will explore the evolving relationship between moving bodies and video technologies. From early filmmakers using dancers as test subjects, to movie musicals and contemporary dance for the camera festivals, mediatization of the body continues to challenge the ephemerality of live dance performance. This course focuses on the growing field of screendance, videodance, or dance-on-camera, working to define this hybrid genre and to understand the collaborative roles of choreographer, director, dancer, cameraman, and video editor.

This course is both a practical and scholarly approach to the genre of screendance, each component essential to a full understanding and mastery of the other. Course work will be divided between the studio and the classroom. For the studio component, students will learn basic video editing and filming techniques. For the classroom component, students will be asked to watch screendance and read a cross-section of criticism. Assignments will be both technological and choreographic (making screendance) and scholarly (written reflections and a seminar paper).

2020-2021 Spring
Category
Dance & Movement
Media Arts

TAPS 32312 Virtual Theaters

(ENGL 32312)

This course probes the nature and limits of theater by exploring a range of theatrical texts from various centuries whose relation to performance is either partially or fully virtual, including philosophical dialogues, closet dramas, novel chapters in dramatic form, drama on social media, remote online theater on platforms like Zoom, algorithmic theater, mixed reality performance, and transmedia games. One unit of the course attends to experiments in remote theater since the COVID-19 pandemic.

2020-2021 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 16606 Genre Fundamentals: Drama

(ENGL 10606)

This course explores the unique challenges of experiencing performance through the page. Students will read plays and performances closely, taking into account not only form, character, plot, and genre, but also theatrical considerations like staging, acting, spectatorship, and historical conventions. We will also consider how various agents—playwrights, readers, directors, actors, and audiences—generate plays and give them meaning. While the course is not intended as a survey of dramatic literature or theater history, students will be introduced to a variety of plays from across the dramatic tradition.

2020-2021 Winter
Category
History & Theory

TAPS 24906/34906 Performance Lab: Classic as Contemporary

This course engages students in the act of excavating prose to uncover their own points of view as creators, writers and directors. The course will uncover direct and indirect processes of adaptation, the role of impulse, and what it means to reimagine classic texts in the contemporary moment. Students will implement a multitude of tools to explore a single project of their own creation that they can use to propose for future productions. Attendance at the first class is mandatory.

2019-2020 Autumn
Category
Creating & Devising
Directing
Writing

TAPS 20060 The World's a Stage: Performance in Politics, Culture, and Everyday Life

(ENGL 18660, SIGN 26049)

This course traces the history of the double-edged notion that the world might resemble a stage from its ancient roots to its current relevance in politics, social media, and gender expression, among other areas. We will explore these questions by reading performance texts and performance theory from classical to contemporary, by attending plays and watching films, and by visiting non-theatrical events in order to consider them as occasions for performance.

2020-2021 Autumn
Category
History & Theory
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