ABSTRACT

Kinship and Performance in the Black and Green Atlantic advances an innovative and compelling approach to writing comparative studies of performance in transnational, intercultural relation to one another. Its chosen subject in this case is the cultural and political intersection of African and Irish diasporic peoples and movements. Gough approaches her subject via five key flashpoints in Black/Green relations, moving from the mid-nineteenth century to the early twenty-first century. In turn, each of these is related to mediums of performance that were prevalent at the time, such as abolitionist oratory and melodrama, photography and tableaux, architecture and folk drama, television and political demonstrations, and visual art and dramaturgy. By examining the unlikely kinship between social actors such as Ida B. Wells and Maud Gonne, Lady Augusta Gregory and Zora Neale Hurston, and Bernadette Devlin and Alice Childress, along with a host of old and new theatrical characters, this book explores how a transmedial investigation of gender, community, and performance allows for a revision of historiography in Atlantic studies, while the study itself revises and reimagines key concepts central to performance studies. In 2014 Kinship and Performance was given the Errol Hill Award for Outstanding Scholarship in African American Theatre from the American Society for Theatre Research.

chapter 2|22 pages

Orientation: Slavery Meets the Famine

chapter 3|32 pages

The Image

Joan of Arc, Jim Crow, and the “Irish Question”

chapter 4|36 pages

Between the Words

Syncopated Rhythm and Tender Mapping

chapter 5|37 pages

Political Action

Kinship, Civil Rights, and Analog(ous) Troubles

chapter 6|30 pages

What Fresh Ghost Is This?

chapter 7|3 pages

Epilogue