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OverviewThese well-researched essays speak to the situation of African-descended artists on the French stage, especially in prestigious government-subsidized theatres. Through documentation, historical analysis, close attention to productions, and witnessing by Black French-speaking artists, Chalaye uncovers and critiques the unacknowledged racialization (and racism) that have circumscribed the careers of Black actors. She ascribes responsibility for this frustrating situation in large part to the lingering impact of the colonial empire on the French imaginary, one that sees “otherness” in French people perceived as non-white. She calls for a recognition of how “race” and racial tropes have operated in French theatre and she advocates exploding the concept of “race”, while creating a theatre that represents the multicultural country that France has become. A translator’s preface examines the concepts of “race”, “nation”, and “theatre” as they operate in France and in the Anglo-American sphere, inviting readers to compare the impact of multiculturalism with the notion of the universal human. Sylvie Chalaye is the foremost French scholar of theatre in French by African and African descended artists. She is professor of theatre at the University of Paris III-Sorbonne Nouvelle, co-founder of the journal Africultures, and director of the Research Laboratory SeFeA. Recent publications include: Scènes et détours d’Afrique: Les Aventuriers de la coopération théâtrale de Jean-Marie Serreau à Christian Schiaretti (Passages, 2022) and (with Judith G. Miller) Contemporary Francophone African Plays: An Anthology (Bucknell, 2024). Her book, Race et théâtre en France: un impensé politique, won the Prix André Malraux in 2020. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Judith G. MillerPublisher: Liverpool University Press Imprint: Liverpool University Press Volume: 104 ISBN: 9781802071887ISBN 10: 1802071881 Pages: 136 Publication Date: 28 September 2025 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Forthcoming Availability: Not yet available ![]() This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsTranslator’s Preface: Some Thoughts on Theatre, National Identity, Colonialism, and “Race” Introduction: Why Should We Think about “Race” in the Theatre? Chapter 1: Of “Black Origins” Chapter II: A Matter of Skin, A Matter of Politics… Chapter III: The Look that Kills the Actor, or the Syndrome of the Baltimore Soldier Chapter IV: Blackface, or the Invention of the “Negro Show” Chapter V: Escaping from the Cage of Neocolonial Exhibitions and the “Eroticolony” Chapter VI: A Story about Presence, or the Organic Stage Chapter VII: On-stage Embodiment is not about Colour; It’s a Vibration Selected Bibliography IndexReviews“[This book] represents an important scholarly contribution to the analysis of the history of theatre in France, staging dramatic historical scenes in which the contested terrain of race is performed, unmasking in the process the contradictions and shortcomings of outdated Republic ideals.” – Dominic Thomas, Letessier Professor of French, UCLA “The quality, originality and significance of [this book] are undisputed” – Professor Clare Finburgh Delijani, Goldsmiths, University of London Author InformationJudith G. Miller is emerita professor of French and Francophone theatre at New York University. She has published widely in the field and translated some forty plays, including plays for Contemporary Francophone African Plays (Bucknell, 2024) and for Speaking Our Selves: New Plays by African Women, edited by Asiimwe Kawe and Robert Vorlicky (Michigan, 2025). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |