9 Items total
A selection of recommended reading and watching materials from LADA’s resources and archives that speak to ideas of history, including online films and writings, free downloads, and books you might want to buy from LADA’s online shop Unbound.
£10.00
A Contemporary Struggle is a collection of texts and images that respond to the dance duet O. Choreographed by Hemsley & Johnson-Small, O is a dance that works to resist...
Sold Out - £21.99
In this bold, innovative work, Dorinne Kondo theorizes the racialized structures of inequality that pervade theater and the arts. Grounded in twenty years of fieldwork as dramaturg and playwright, Kondo...
Sold Out - £9.99
Where our real home might be is tricky to say. In a way that is the point. Some people say that it is the body, but I think the body...
£23.99
Black performance theory is a rich interdisciplinary area of study and critical method. This collection of new essays by some of its pioneering thinkers—many of whom are performers—demonstrates the breadth,...
£19.19 £23.99
A new manifesto for performance studies on the art of queer of color worldmaking. After the Party tells the stories of minoritarian artists who mobilize performance to produce freedom and...
£52.50
In this ground-breaking collection of critical essays, 15 writers explore the experimental, interdisciplinary and radically transgressive field of contemporary live art in South Africa. Set against a contemporary South African...
£15.99 £19.99
Combining black feminist theory, philosophy, and performance studies, Sarah Jane Cervenak ruminates on the significance of physical and mental roaming for black freedom. She is particularly interested in the power...
£13.20 £16.50
In his controversial essay on white jazz musician Burton Greene, Amiri Baraka asserted that jazz was exclusively an African American art form and explicitly fused the idea of a black...
£17.59 £21.99
"Taken as a trilogy, consent not to be a single being is a monumental accomplishment: a brilliant theoretical intervention that might be best described as a powerful case for blackness...