Argentine theater and urban space: applications for a theorization

Authors

  • David William Foster Arizona State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5902/1679849X74297

Keywords:

Argentine theater, Urban space, Theorization

Abstract

What I am interested in addressing here is not the history of Argentine theater in the city, the city of Buenos Aires, but rather how the image of the city is built within the theatrical text. Rather, I am interested in dealing with how one could theorize about the presence of the urban experience in the theater without falling into the mere count of "images", "representations" and "allegories" with the purpose of investigating a problem of cultural geography. from the theatrical phenomenon.

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Author Biography

David William Foster, Arizona State University

Doutorado na University of Washington

References

AIRA, César. Copi. Buenos Aires: Beatriz Viterbo Editora, 1991.

FOSTER, David William. Buenos Aires: Perspectives on the city and Cultural Production. Gainesville: U Florida P, 1998.

FOSTER, David William. Espacio escénico y lenguage. Buenos Aires: Galerna, 1998.

FOSTER, David William. José Gonzalez’s Los invertidos and the Vampire Theory of Hommosexuality. Latin American Theatre Review. 22.2 (1989): 19-29.

FOSTER, David William. Comp. Latin American writers on gay and lesbian themes: a biocritical sourcebook. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 1994.

FOSTER, David William. Sexualidades homoeróticas y producción cultural: teorías y aplicaciones. San José: Editorial de la Universidad de Costa Rica, 1999.

FOSTER, David William. Teatro norteamericano/teatro gay en Buenos Aires. Teatro XXI 2.2 (otoño 1996): 5-7.

GEIROLA, Gustavo. "Sexualidad, anarquía y treatralidad en Los invertidos de Gonzáles Castillo". Latin American Theatre Review 28.2 (1995): 73-84.

Published

2003-09-01 — Updated on 2023-11-24

Versions

How to Cite

Foster, D. W. (2023). Argentine theater and urban space: applications for a theorization. Literatura E Autoritarismo, (1). https://doi.org/10.5902/1679849X74297 (Original work published September 1, 2003)