Theatre and Race
By (Author) Harvey Young
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
19th February 2026
2nd edition
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Racism and racial discrimination / Anti-racism
112
Width 111mm, Height 178mm
Theatre and Race centers on the interrelationship of the words on either side of the ampersand. It offers an accessible overview of how race is performed and how western theatrical practice has wrestled with the topic, question, and problem of racial difference over centuries.
This study introduces critical and theoretical concepts to account for how the simple act of being attentive to the seeming otherness of another person within the expressive arts, as well as in everyday life, invites an engagement with the social history and lived experience of race.
In addition, it spotlights the long history of race and racial concerns within the theatre: the xenophobic fascination of ancient Greeks and Romans, the anxiety caused by cultural and religious difference during the Elizabethan period, the intense and widespread appeal of blackface minstrelsy alongside the performances of other faces in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the controversies related to colorblind casting practices toward the end of the last century, and recent campaigns for and against antiracist and post-race theatre.
This updated and revised edition includes new material by Harvey Young addressing Theatre and Race in 2024 and beyond.
Harvey Young is Dean of the College of Fine Arts and Professor of English and Theatre at Boston University, US. He has been published in academic journals, newspapers and magazines, and is the author of ten books.