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            Between the Layers

            Spiderwoman Theatre, Storyweaving, and Survivance

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            Author(s)
            Carter, Jill
            Language
            English
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            Abstract
            The Spiderwoman Theatre, the longest-running Indigenous theatre company in North America has heralded the revolutionary methodology of Storyweaving for generations of Indigenous artists. Storyweaving is a distinct methodology that governs the dramaturgical structure and performed transmission of the company’s plays on the contemporary stage. The practice of Storyweaving predates written history. It has been (and remains) specific to tribal storytellers across the continent. The reclamation, then, of this aesthetic legacy by contemporary Indigenous storytellers is a crucial act of recovery. Jill Carter, an Anishinaabe-Ashkenazi theatre-worker and scholar, examines the process and development of Storyweaving. She studies how Storyweaving imagines and architects a functional framework that is being adopted and adapted by artists from myriad nations to create works (on the page and stage) that facilitate the healing, transformation, and survivance of their communities. Between the Layers pays respects to the teachers and visionaries that moulded this practice and encourages future generations to continue its legacy, while making a much-needed contribution to the study of Indigenous theatre and performance. In its painstaking documentation of the Storyweaving artform, Between the Layers refuses the devaluation, erasure, and suppression of Indigenous culture, while contributing to the dissemination and celebration of Indigenous Knowledge Systems.
            URI
            https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/171539
            Keywords
            History / Native American
            ISBN
            9781487584351
            Publisher
            University of Toronto Press
            Publication date and place
            2025
            Classification
            History of the Americas
            Pages
            378
            • Imported or submitted locally

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              This project received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 871069.

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