“Theaters of Citizenship is a rich account of how Egypt’s young dramatists have fashioned a revolutionary avant-garde, and in that process have created a newly critical aesthetic vocabulary of youth, citizenship, gender, and nation. Reading this book provides great insights into the creative ways youth are imagining, and indeed living, their potential futures.” —Jessica Winegar, author of Creative Reckonings: The Politics of Art and Culture in Contemporary Egypt
“Tracing the independent theatre movement from 2004 until 2014, Pahwa's book sheds light on avant-garde performances that offered young theatre makers a parallel space for artistic expression in Egypt outside institutionalized governmental and commercial theatres . . . The strength of the volume lies in its highlighting of the sociopolitical aspects of Egyptian theatre and its detailed documentation of the many facets of the independent theatre movement.” —Areeg Ibrahim, Modern Drama
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“Sonali Pahwa has crafted an incisive ethnographic account of independent urban theater in Egypt in the years surrounding the decline and fall of the Mubarak regime. Approaching theater as a stage for citizenship, she evocatively conveys how young Egyptians engaged with a variety of theatrical genres and practices during these critical years, from the experimental avant-garde to the theatrics of personal development workshops and from feminist theater to street performances after the Arab Spring.” —Jane Goodman, author of Staging Cultural Encounters: Algerian Actors Tour the United States— -
“This compellingly written ethnography of theater and performance in Egypt before, during, and after the Arab Spring provides absolute proof that art transforms not only minds and bodies but modes of citizenship—whether explicitly or in fugitive practices that escape the attention of the state.” —Deborah Kapchan, editor of Poetic Justice: An Anthology of Contemporary Moroccan Poetry
“Through the lens of theater practice, this insightful book explores Egyptian responses to a range of modern phenomena, from the rise of neoliberal politics, with its doctrine of self-help, to trends in Arab feminism and the rethinking of Arab masculinities. Theaters of Citizenship is a highly valuable addition to the growing literature on Arab identity formation and political action in the cultural spheres.” —Edward Ziter, author of Political Performance in Syria: From the Six-Day War to the Syrian Uprising— -