“Kate Bredeson’s outstanding book puts the ‘story’ back in theatre history. Meticulously researched and vividly told, her history of theatre artists and performances during the events of May 1968 offers insights into the past and suggests the potential for theatre’s political and social future. An engaging and necessary read that comes at just the right time.” —Sarah Bay-Cheng, author of Performance and Media: Taxonomies for a Changing Field
"Occupying the Stage captures in vivid detail the excitement of a revolutionary moment in theater history. Bredeson weds insightful dramatic analysis to detailed accounts of events and the result is a beautifully drawn illustration of theater as activism. More than the history of a moment in French theater, the book presents the story of May ’68 as a lesson in the power of theater to embody a new vision of society, demonstrate strategies of protest, resist oppression, and effect political action. From the archives of fifty years ago, she excavates a story that speaks to the desires of any artist today wishing to confront contemporary issues. Theater makers and scholars will be inspired by this timely study about theater and its ability to embody, reflect and articulate the dreams of social and political change." —Mechele Leon, author of Molière, the French Revolution, and the Theatrical Afterlife
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"Bredeson provides multiple points of entry into her story, and to an impressive degree. As a scholar of French cinema and militant video of the same period, I found myself learning on diverse fronts, ranging from specific theater history to information regarding cultural policy and cultural politics that filmmakers and film actors also faced. The book is written simultaneously for the layperson and a fellow expert, almost magically so. Bredeson has accomplished an important feat in 1968 scholarship." —E. Grace An, Oberlin College
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"Bredeson’s book recalls the power of embodied protest and the lived potential of imagination by refusing boundaries between theatre and activism. Passionately argued, richly detailed, and exhaustively researched, Occupying the Stage gives us hope again, for theatre and for society, by memorializing the innovations and utopian promise of the past." —Jill Dolan, author of Utopia in Performance: Finding Hope at the Theatre
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"Bredeson provides multiple points of entry into her story, and to an impressive degree. As a scholar of French cinema and militant video of the same period, I found myself learning on diverse fronts, ranging from specific theater history to information regarding cultural policy and cultural politics that filmmakers and film actors also faced. The book is written simultaneously for the layperson and a fellow expert, almost magically so. Bredeson has accomplished an important feat in 1968 scholarship." —E. Grace An, Oberlin College
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“Kate Bredeson’s outstanding book puts the ‘story’ back in theatre history. Meticulously researched and vividly told, her history of theatre artists and performances during the events of May 1968 offers insights into the past and suggests the potential for theatre’s political and social future. An engaging and necessary read that comes at just the right time.” —Sarah Bay-Cheng, author of Performance and Media: Taxonomies for a Changing Field
"Occupying the Stage captures in vivid detail the excitement of a revolutionary moment in theater history. Bredeson weds insightful dramatic analysis to detailed accounts of events and the result is a beautifully drawn illustration of theater as activism. More than the history of a moment in French theater, the book presents the story of May ’68 as a lesson in the power of theater to embody a new vision of society, demonstrate strategies of protest, resist oppression, and effect political action. From the archives of fifty years ago, she excavates a story that speaks to the desires of any artist today wishing to confront contemporary issues. Theater makers and scholars will be inspired by this timely study about theater and its ability to embody, reflect and articulate the dreams of social and political change." —Mechele Leon, author of Molière, the French Revolution, and the Theatrical Afterlife
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"Bredeson’s book recalls the power of embodied protest and the lived potential of imagination by refusing boundaries between theatre and activism. Passionately argued, richly detailed, and exhaustively researched, Occupying the Stage gives us hope again, for theatre and for society, by memorializing the innovations and utopian promise of the past." —Jill Dolan, author of Utopia in Performance: Finding Hope at the Theatre
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