Readying the Revolution

African American Theater and Performance from Post-World War II to the Black Arts Movement

Subjects: Theater and Performance, African American Studies, American Studies
Paperback : 9780472057184, 190 pages, 12 photographs, 6 x 9, January 2025
Hardcover : 9780472077182, 190 pages, 12 photographs, 6 x 9, January 2025
Open Access : 9780472904808, 190 pages, 12 photographs, 6 x 9, January 2025
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A critical history of Black culture post-World War II that helped cultivate the spirit of Black revolutionary theater

Table of contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter One - More Than ‘Guts Enough’: Jackie Robinson’s Performances of Integration and Resistance
Chapter Two - Staging Collective Black Resistance, 1948-54
Chapter Three - Before We Knew Beah: The Revolutionary Performance Praxis of Beulah Richardson
Chapter Four - Snatching the Bull Whip: Purlie Victorious as Proto-revolutionary Comedy
Chapter Five - From The Blacks to Les Blancs and Beyond: Variations on Theatrical Outrage
Chapter Six - “...But the Show Hasn’t Been Written Yet”: “Mississippi Goddam” and Nina Simone’s Turn Toward Black Nationalism
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index

Description

Starting in 1966, African American activist Stokely Carmichael and other political leaders adopted the phrase "Black Power!" The slogan captured a militant, revolutionary spirit that was already emerging in the work of playwrights, poets, musicians, and visual artists throughout the Black Arts movement of the mid-1960s. But the story of those theater artists and performers whose work helped bring about the Black Arts revolution has not fully been told. Readying the Revolution: African American Theater and Performance from Post-World War II to the Black Arts Movement explores the dynamic era of Black culture between the end of World War II and the start of the Black Arts Movement (1946-1964) by illuminating how artists and innovators such as Jackie Robinson, Lorraine Hansberry, Ossie Davis, Nina Simone, and others helped radicalize Black culture and Black political thought. In doing so, these artists defied white cultural hegemony in the United States, and built the foundation for the revolutionary movement in Black theater that followed in the mid 1960s. Through archival research, close textual reading, and an analysis of performance artifacts, Shandell demonstrates how these artists negotiated a space on the public stage for cultivating radical Black aesthetics and built the foundation for the revolutionary movement in Black theater that followed in the mid-1960s.

Jonathan Shandell is Associate Professor of Theater Arts at Arcadia University.

“Explores a range of Black plays, performers, and artists whose ‘radical creativity’ connects the radical left culture of the 1930s with the militancy of Black Power in the 1960s. The book’s exciting interdisciplinary scope allows the author to build on and expand existing scholarship that has long sought to trouble the periodization and disciplinary boundaries of the Civil Rights and Black Power movements.”

- Kate Dossett, University of Leeds

“Jonathan Shandell is an extraordinary chronicler of American Theatre. He just might be the best. In this rigorously researched book, Shandell gifts us a compelling account of the rise of Black arts activism in the mid-20th century anchored in the achievements of Jackie Robinson, Alice Childress, Beah Richards, Nina Simone and more, including Lorraine Hansberry.”

- Harvey Young, Boston University

“With reverence and skill, Shandell’s beautiful book asks the reader to think through multiple modes of Black radicalism that exist within the postwar archive of African American theater and performance while looking closely for important connections to the artistic legacies we are building in the present. Shandell’s book is an indispensable read for any course on African American theater history and performance or for any enthusiast of the history of Black Theater and performance.”

- Nicole Hodges Persley, University of Kansas

"This book makes a valuable contribution to scholarship that reconsiders the cultural and political itineraries of black life in the wake of World War II. Though opening with Lorraine Hansberry, it prioritizes the voices of little-known black plays and playwrights. Anchoring his study in this undercommons of black theatre workers, Shandell tells an exciting and convincing story about the importance of black theatre (and performance more broadly) to the varied and various radicalisms that saturated and exploded the worlds that were, and that strained to create the worlds that could be."
 

- Julius Fleming, University of Maryland