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Public Performances offers a deep and wide-ranging exploration of relationships among genres of public performance and of the underlying political motivations they share. Illustrating the connections among three themes—the political, the carnivalesque, and the ritualesque—this volume provides rich and comprehensive insight into public performance as an assertion of political power.

Contributors consider how public genres of performance express not only celebration but also dissent, grief, and remembrance; examine the permeability of the boundaries between genres; and analyze the approval or regulation of such events by municipalities and other institutions. Where the particular use of public space is not sanctioned or where that use meets with hostility from institutions or represents a critique of them, performers are effectively reclaiming public space to make public statements on their own terms—an act of popular sovereignty.

Through these concepts, Public Performances distinguishes the sometimes overlapping dimensions of public symbolic display. Carnival, and thus the carnivalesque, is understood to possess tacit social permission for unconventional or even deviant performance, on the grounds that normal social order will resume when the performance concludes. Ritual, and the ritualesque, leverages a deeper symbolic sensibility, one believed—or at least intended—by the participants to effect transformative, longer-term change.

Contributors: Roger D. Abrahams, John Borgonovo, Laurent Sébastien Fournier, Lisa Gilman, Barbara Graham, David Harnish, Samuel Kinser, Scott Magelssen, Elena Martinez, Pamela Moro, Beverly J. Stoeltje, Daniel Wojcik, Dorothy L. Zinn

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright, Dedication
  2. pp. i-vi
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. vii-viii
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  1. Introduction
  2. pp. ix-xvi
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  1. 1. From Carnivalesque to Ritualesque: Public Ritual and the Theater of the Street
  2. Jack Santino
  3. pp. 3-15
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  1. 2. Locality, Spectacle, State Politics: Comparative Study of Carnival Traditions in Renaissance Nuremberg and Modern Trinidad
  2. Samuel Kinser
  3. pp. 16-48
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  1. 3. Conflict Displays in the Black Atlantic
  2. Roger D. Abrahams
  3. pp. 49-65
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  1. 4. Protesting and Grieving: Ritual, Politics, and the Effects of Scale
  2. Beverly J. Stoeltje
  3. pp. 66-92
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  1. 5. Political Percussions: Cork Brass Bands and the Irish Revolution, 1914–1922
  2. John Borgonovo
  3. pp. 93-112
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  1. 6. ¡Que Bonita Bandera!: Place, Space, and Identity as Expressed with the Puerto Rican Flag
  2. Elena Martínez
  3. pp. 113-132
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  1. 7. The Lives of Processions in Bali and Lombok, Indonesia
  2. David Harnish
  3. pp. 133-150
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  1. 8. The Anthropology of Festivals: Changes in Theory and Practice
  2. Laurent Sébastien Fournier
  3. pp. 151-163
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  1. 9. The Politics of Cultural Promotion: The Umthetho Festival of Malawi’s Northern Ngoni
  2. Lisa Gilman
  3. pp. 164-188
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  1. 10. Music as Activist Spectacle: AIDS, Breast Cancer, and LGBT Choral Singing
  2. Pamela Moro
  3. pp. 189-204
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  1. 11. The “Days of Scanzano”: The Carnivalesque and the Ritualesque in an Antinuclear Protest
  2. Dorothy L. Zinn
  3. pp. 205-221
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  1. 12. “Some Are Born Green, Some Achieve Greenness”: Protest Theater and Environmental Activism
  2. Scott Magelssen
  3. pp. 222-238
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  1. 13. The Material Culture of Remembrance in Ireland: Roadside Memorials as Contested Spaces
  2. Barbara Graham
  3. pp. 239-253
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  1. 14. The Politics of Junk: Social Protest, “Outsider” Environments, and Ritualesque Display at the Heidelberg Project in Detroit
  2. Daniel Wojcik
  3. pp. 254-277
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  1. About the Authors
  2. pp. 278-282
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 283-298
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