Acknowledgments
Opening Remarks / Diana Taylor
The Multicultural Paradigm: An Open Letter to the National Arts
Community / Guillermo Gomez-Pena
Art in America con Acento / Cherrie Moraga
Looking for the Magic: Chicanos in the Mainstream / Jorge
Huerta
Staging AIDS: What's Latinos Got To Do With It? / Alberto
Sandoval
Border Boda or Divorce Fronterizo? / Marguerite Waller
Seduced and Abandoned: Chicanas and Lesbians in Representation /
Sue-Ellen Case
Public Art, Performance Art, and the politics of Site / Maria
Teresa Marrero
"Salvacion Casita": Puerto Rican Performance and Vernacular
Architecture in the South Bronx / Juan Flores
Inventions and Transgressions: A Fractured Narrative on Feminist
Theatre in Mexico / Kirsten F. Nigro
A Touch of Evil: Jesusa Rodriguez's Subversive Church / Jean
Franco
Ethnicity, Gender, and Power: Carnaval in Santiago de Cuba / Judith
Bettelheim
New Mayan Theatre in Chiapas: Anthropology, Literacy, and Social
Drama / Donald H. Frischmann
"A Woman Fell into the River": Negotiating Female Subjects in
Contemporary Mayan Theatre / Cynthia Steele
For Carnival, Clinic, and Camera: Argentina's Turn-of-the-Century
Drag Culture Performs "Woman" / Jorge Salessi and Patrick
O'Connor
Performing Gender: Las Madres de la Plaza de Mayo / Diana
Taylor
Closing Remarks / Juan Villegas
Bibliography / Tiffany Ana Lopez and Jacqueline Lazu
Contributors
Index
Diana Taylor is Associate Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature at Dartmouth College. She is the author of Theater in Crisis: Drama and Politics in Latin America.
Juan Villegas is Chair of the Department of Spanish and Portuguese at the University of California, Irvine. He is the director of Gestos as well as the author of numerous novels and scholarly works in Spanish.
"Among its many virtues, Negotiating Performance has the merit of bravely tackling the thorny issue of Latino identity head-on. Taylor’s strong and thoughtful introduction sets the tone for a challenging reflection on the pitfalls of a multiculturalist stance (be it purely commercial or naively sympathetic) that blithely incorporates, homogenizes, and dispatches differences without ever dwelling on the more profound implications of those differences in U. S. culture today."-Sylvia Molloy, New York University "The attractiveness of Negotiating Performance lies exactly in the boldness of including a diverse group of essays, each of which speaks with its own voice. It will provide valuable insights into areas of contemporary interest in theatre studies."-George Woodyard, University of Kansas
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