ABSTRACT

The intersections of religion, politics, and performance form the loci of many of the most serious issues facing the world today, sites where some of the world’s most pressing and momentous events are contested and played out. That this circumstance warrants continued, thoughtful, and imaginative engagement from those within the fields of theatre and performance is one of the guiding principles of this volume. This collection features a diverse set of perspectives, written by some of the top scholars in the relevant fields, on the many modern intersections of religion with theatre and performance. Contributors argue that religion can no longer be conceived of as a cultural phenomenon that is safely sequestered in the "private sphere." It is instead an explicitly public force that stimulates and complicates public actions, and thus a crucial component of much performance. From mystic theologies of acting to the neuroscience of spirituality in rituals to the performance of secularism, these essays address a broad variety of religious traditions, sharing a common conception of religion as a crucial object of discourse—one that is formed by, and significantly formative of, performance.

chapter |24 pages

Introduction

part |89 pages

Religious Actors

chapter |16 pages

Embodying the Disembodied

Hesychasm, Meditation, and Michael Chekhov's Higher Ego

chapter |9 pages

Becoming-Lucid

Theatre and Tantra

chapter |12 pages

Jew Media

Performance and Technology for the Fifty-Eighth Century

chapter |15 pages

Plain Speech Acts

Reading Quakerism with Theatre and Performance Studies

part |76 pages

Dramas and Theaters

chapter |28 pages

A Transdiasporic Paradigm

The Afoxé Filhos de Gandhy

chapter |13 pages

Return to Tradition

The Symbolist Legacy to the Present-Day Arts

chapter |7 pages

Who Is Rama?

part |48 pages

Secularization and Its Discontents

chapter |15 pages

Feeling Secular

chapter |15 pages

About[/]Doing

Religion and Theatre in the Academy