Explore the intersection of revolt and compassion in six contemporary performance scripts.
Revolt/Compassion gathers six thought-provoking works by Michael Springate, showcasing his artistic interdisciplinarity. Spanning twenty-five years, these scripts-Historical Bliss, Dog and Crow, The Consolation of Philosophy, Freeport Texas, Kareena, and Kt: Shock and Awe-capture a wide range of interests and influences. Springate delves into themes of language, history, and politics, offering a unique perspective on contemporary issues.
These scripts are perfect for those interested in modern drama, performance studies, and the exploration of complex social themes. Discover the power of performance to challenge perspectives and ignite critical dialogue. Experience the blend of historical context and contemporary relevance that defines Springate's innovative approach to theatre.
About the Author :
Michael Springate is the author of the novel The Beautiful West & The Beloved of God (Guernica Editions, 2014), translated and published in French as L'engrenage des apparences (Les editions Semaphore 2017). His collection, Revolt/Compassion: Six Scripts for Contemporary Performance (Guernica Editions) was published in 2019 with a forward by Erin Hurley. He wrote the screenplay for Carolyn Combs' debut feature, Acts of Imagination (2006), as well as for her most recent feature, Bella Ciao! (2018). Michael is a past Artistic Director of Playwrights Workshop Montreal, Prairie Theatre Exchange in Winnipeg, Factory Theatre in Toronto, and Dramaturg and Artistic Associate with Full Circle: First Nations Performance in Vancouver. He has taught acting, directing, and play development at both Simon Fraser and Concordia Universities, and was invited as Researcher/Lecturer to Gwangju National University in South Korea. He is a founding member of the Vancouver Latin American Cultural Centre, as well as of the film group Commercial Drive Productions, and is active in issues related to cooperative housing. He considers writing a life-long discipline rooted in independent research and reflection.
Review :
Consciously cra-fted, precise in their diction, and allusive in their references, the six plays comprising Revolt/Compassion ask for the reader's collaboration. Readers are not simple receivers of pre-determined or encoded meanings; rather, they must find their way in, are encouraged to change perspective, and participate in the interpretation of the text ... Their poetry -- the considered arrangement of the words, the shape of the text on the page, the accretion of meaning across the play, its solicitation of the reader's increased awareness -- activates the senses without necessarily dictating where they should take me or what I should make of them. At the same time, the ideas unfolded require a different vantage, a theoretical engagement. How can we locate ourselves in history? Where do art and politics intersect? What can words convey? How does social change come about? What part of memory and ideology is imagination? Revolt and compassion -- are these stances in contradiction with each other, or a contradiction with which to begin?
--From the introduction by Dr. Erin Hurley, McGill University
Frightening in its honesty, timely in its observations... Michael Springate's unflinching picture of Western imperialism will leave you breathless.
--Charles R. Lawson, Prof. Emer. at American University (on The Beautiful West and the Beloved of God ).
Springate promotes the thought-provoking idea that actual freedom is found in the absence of language: in silence.
--Canadian Literature A Quarterly Criticism and Review