Theatre and Social Issues in Malawi: Performers, Audiences, Aesthetics
Resource type
            Journal Article
        Author/contributor
                - Kerr, David (Author)
 
Title
            Theatre and Social Issues in Malawi: Performers, Audiences, Aesthetics
        Abstract
            Theatre workers in the Third World have largely rejected both the outward trappings and the underlying aesthetic assumptions of the colonial styles they first inherited: but the impulse to evolve or rediscover indigenous forms has often involved the imposition of a would-be ‘popular’ theatre form by an elite of university-educated animateurs. David Kerr has described these as ‘induced’ forms, and here analyzes the process by which one such experiment, in Malawi, was both adopted and assimilated by villagers, for the better understanding of whose social problems it was conceived. From 1974 to 1980 David Kerr was artistic director of the Chikwakwa Theatre project in Zambia (described in the first series of Theatre Quarterly, III, No. 10), since when he has been teaching in the Department of Fine and Performing Arts in the University of Malawi, and serving as co-ordinator to the Travelling Theatre project there.
        Publication
            New Theatre Quarterly
        Volume
            4
        Issue
            14
        Pages
            173-180
        Date
            1988/05
        Language
            en
        ISSN
            1474-0613, 0266-464X
        Short Title
            Theatre and Social Issues in Malawi
        Accessed
            13/08/2022, 15:13
        Library Catalogue
            Cambridge University Press
        Extra
            Publisher: Cambridge University Press
        Citation
            Kerr, D. (1988). Theatre and Social Issues in Malawi: Performers, Audiences, Aesthetics. New Theatre Quarterly, 4(14), 173–180. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0266464X00002700
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