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Our
Land is Made of Courage and Glory
Nationalist
Performance of Nicaragua and Guatemala
E.J.
Westlake
June
cloth,
0-8093-2625-6, $55.00
176
pages, 6 x 9, 9 illus.
Theatre
Studies / Theater
in the Americas
Robert
A. Schanke, series editor
Our
Land Is Made of Courage and Glory: Nationalist Performance of Nicaragua
and Guatemala adds to a growing and timely body of work on nationalist
drama. Examining important twentieth-century plays that few people have
written about in English, E. J. Westlake analyzes the phenomenon of nation
as performance by focusing on the definition of a people, national metaphors,
and the uses of national history.
Westlake discerns the common characteristics that constitute nationalist
plays, a genre that seeks to legitimate the nature of a nation by defining
its boundaries, race, language, citizens, and history. Particularly relevant
in an era influenced by imperialism, migration, and globalization, the
volume probes the concepts of nation and nationalism in the context of
postcolonial literary and performance theory.
Our Land Is Made of Courage and Glory covers the political and
theatrical history of Nicaragua and Guatemala. Westlake examines how the
blending of races factors into nationalism with a look at the play El
tren amarillo by Manuel Galich and uses Nobel laureate Miguel Ángel
Asturias’s Soluna to show how nationalists appropriate
Mayan culture to create a sense of the Guatemalan people and culture.
She discusses the mapping of history as a linear progression in Alan Bolt’s
Banana republic and as a cycle of patricide in Por los caminos
van los campesinos. by Pablo Antonio Cuadra. Westlake also suggests that
Ronald Steiner’s La noche de Wiwilí, a play taken
from an eyewitness account, acts as a site of official national memory,
and she examines as well the canonizing of the folk ballet El Güegüense
to further explore the notion of sites of memory versus lived memory.
Raising essential questions about the future of nationalism and nationalist
performance, Our Land is Made of Courage and Glory will be of
interest to scholars and students in drama, Latin American theatre studies,
political science, and history.
E.
J. Westlake, an assistant professor in theatre studies at the
University of Michigan, has taught theatre history and playwriting at
Auburn University and Bowling Green State University and has published
essays on Latin American theatre, community-based theatre, and public
art.
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