Contents: Marc Maufort: Contemporary Anglophone Drama as Crucible of Cultures - Timberlake Wertenbaker: Dancing with History - Drew Hayden Taylor: Canoeing the Rivers of Canadian Aboriginal Theatre: The Portages and the Pitfalls - Drew Milne: The Anxiety of Print: Recent Fashions in British Drama - Jozef De Vos: Ravenhill's Wilde Game - Amelia Howe Kritzer: Political Currents in Caryl Churchill's Plays at the Turn of the Millennium - Donna Soto-Morettini: «Disturbing the Spirits of the Past»: The Uncertainty Principle in Michael Frayn's Copenhagen - Maya E. Roth: Im/Migrations, Border-Crossings and «Willful Internationalism» in Timberlake Wertenbaker's The Break of Day - Alain Piette: The Flexing of Muscles and Tongues: Thug Rituals and Rhetoric in David Mamet's American Buffalo - Barbara Ozieblo: The Complexities of Intertextuality: Arthur Miller's Broken Glass and Maria Irene Fornes's Fefu and Her Friends - Harry J. Elam, Jr.: The Postmulticultural: A Tale of Mothers and Sons - Eriko Hara: An Untold History: The Challenges of Self-Representation in Asian American Women's Theater - Robert H. Vorlicky: «Imagine All the People»: Hip Hop, Post-multiculturalism, and Solo Performance in the United States - Thierry Dubost: Irish Disconnections with the Former British Empire: Thomas Kilroy's Adaptation of The Seagull - Jerry Wasserman: Where is Here Now?: Living the Border in the New Canadian Drama - Anne Nothof: Humanist Heresies in Modern Canadian Drama - Ric Knowles: «Look. Look again.» Daniel David Moses' Decolonizing Optics - Robert Appleford: «That Almost Present Dream of Tomorrow»: Daniel David Moses' Kyotopolis as Native Canadian Science Fiction/History Play - Robert Nunn: Drew Hayden Taylor's alterNatives: Dishing the Dirt - Alan Filewod: Theatrical Capitalism, Imagined Theatres and the Reclaimed Authenticities of the Spectacular - Valérie Bada: Derek Walcott's The Odyssey: A Post-Colonial «Odd Assay» of the Epic Genre as a Regenerative Source of «Latent Cross-Culturalities» - Erol Acar/Martina Stange: Portrayals of Masculinity/ies in Wole Soyinka's The Lion and the Jewel - Geoffrey V. Davis: «The Critical and the Dissident, the Irreverent and the Playful»: Drama in the New South Africa - Marcia Blumberg: Mapping Counter Truths and Reconciliations: Staging Testimony in Contemporary South Africa - Marc Maufort: Jane Harrison's Stolen and the International Postcolonial Context - Tom Burvill: Multicultural Arts, Ethnicised Identities? - Christopher Balme: Pacific Overtures and Asian Encounters: New Zealand Theatre and the Bi-Cultural Paradigm - Helen Gilbert: Embodied Knowledges: Technologies of Representation in a Postcolonial Classroom.
The Editors: Marc Maufort, the editor, is a professor of English, American, and postcolonial literature at the Université Libre de Bruxelles. He is the author, the editor or the co-editor of Songs of American Experience. The Vision of O'Neill and Melville; Staging Difference. Cultural Pluralism in American Theatre and Drama; Siting the Other. Re-visions of Marginality in Australian and English-Canadian Drama, and Transgressive Itineraries. Postcolonial Hybridizations of Dramatic Realism. Franca Bellarsi, the associate editor, is an instructor in English and American literature at the Université Libre de Bruxelles. She has been associate editor for Siting the Other. Re-visions of Marginality in Australian and English-Canadian Drama. She is currently finalizing her doctoral thesis devoted to a Buddhist reading of Allen Ginsberg's work, and has contributed several articles on Beat mysticism and literature.