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Kattaikkuttu: A Rural Theatre Tradition South India
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Barnes and Noble
Kattaikkuttu: A Rural Theatre Tradition South India
Current price: $68.00
Barnes and Noble
Kattaikkuttu: A Rural Theatre Tradition South India
Current price: $68.00
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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This is the first book to offer a clear introduction to Kattaikkuttu (or Terukkuttu
), a vibrant, vocal and physical outdoor Tamil theatre tradition from India. It describes the theatre's characteristic heroic nature as expressed through its principal, male
kattai
characters, explores its history, social status and ritual context, and examines the production of all-night plays.
After placing Kattaikkuttu in the wider, competitive context of the performing arts in India, Hanne M. de Bruin introduces readers to some of the debates about the form and provides an overview of the different elements that make up a Kattaikkuttu performance. It considers its performance spaces and the way the form has changed, such as its transition towards an independent and more professional theatre genre, as well as the opening up of the form to different castes and to women. It covers the production and frameworks of all-night performances, uses the
Mahabharata
play
Karna Moksam
as a case study and examines recent changes in the Kattaikkuttu repertory.
In addition, the book looks in more detail at the role of the performer, including the training of a Kattaikkuttu novice, the performance score of actor-singers that underlie a specific role or
vesam,
and a seasoned performer's agency in interpreting well-known roles. Finally, the study turbans to recent innovations, in particular the creation of new work and the Kattaikkuttu Gurukulam.
), a vibrant, vocal and physical outdoor Tamil theatre tradition from India. It describes the theatre's characteristic heroic nature as expressed through its principal, male
kattai
characters, explores its history, social status and ritual context, and examines the production of all-night plays.
After placing Kattaikkuttu in the wider, competitive context of the performing arts in India, Hanne M. de Bruin introduces readers to some of the debates about the form and provides an overview of the different elements that make up a Kattaikkuttu performance. It considers its performance spaces and the way the form has changed, such as its transition towards an independent and more professional theatre genre, as well as the opening up of the form to different castes and to women. It covers the production and frameworks of all-night performances, uses the
Mahabharata
play
Karna Moksam
as a case study and examines recent changes in the Kattaikkuttu repertory.
In addition, the book looks in more detail at the role of the performer, including the training of a Kattaikkuttu novice, the performance score of actor-singers that underlie a specific role or
vesam,
and a seasoned performer's agency in interpreting well-known roles. Finally, the study turbans to recent innovations, in particular the creation of new work and the Kattaikkuttu Gurukulam.