who`s who in research
Transcription
who`s who in research
who’s who in research performing Arts Who’s Who in Research Performing Arts Proof please do not circulate Who’s Who in Research Performing Arts intellect Bristol, UK / Chicago, USA First published in the UK in 2011 by Intellect, The Mill, Parnall Road, Fishponds, Bristol, BS16 3JG, UK First published in the USA in 2011 by Intellect, The University of Chicago Press, 1427 E. 60th Street, Chicago, IL 60637, USA Copyright © 2011 Intellect Ltd All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission. A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN 9781841504940 Frank Abrahams Westminster Choir College of Rider University, 101 Walnut Lane, Princeton, New Jersey, NJ 085403819, United States of America Keywords critical pedagogy, community music, music education, Brazil, Paulo Freire Frank Abrahams is Professor of Music Education and Chair of the Music Education department at Westminster Choir College of Rider University in Princeton, New Jersey. His lessons form the foundation for the general music curriculum at Westminster Academy, and his pedagogical ideas provide the framework for Westminster’s undergraduate and graduate music education curricula. Abrahams is a frequent presenter at the Music Educators National Conference and is co-author of Case Studies in Music Education. He is also co-author of a chapter in the forthcoming text, Perspectives on Urban Music Education, published by MENC, the national association for music education. › Critical pedagogy in the community music education programmes of Brazil, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 117-126. Gbemisola Adeoti Obafemi Awolowo University, Department of English, Ile-Ife, Nigeria Keywords governance, Nigeria, theatre, video, Yoruba Gbemisola Adeoti (Ph.D.) is lecturer in the English Department of Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. His areas of teaching and research include Dramatic Literature, Poetry, Literary History/Theory and Popular Culture. He is the author of Naked Soles, co-editor (with Bjorn Beckman) of Intellectuals and African Development and editor of Muse and Mimesis: Critical Perspectives on Ahmed Yerima’s Drama. He was a British Academy Visiting Fellow at the School of English, University of Leeds, United Kingdom, from October to December 2008. He is a Postdoctoral Fellow of the African Humanities Program organized by the American Council of Learned Societies (ACLS). › Adaptation in contemporary Nigerian drama: The example of Ahmed Yerima, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 115-128. Siân Adiseshiah School of Humanities, Faculty of Media, Humanities and Technology,, University of Lincoln, Brayford Pool, Lincoln,, LN6 7TS, United Kingdom Keywords Salad Days, musical theatre, utopianism utopian theatre, nostalgia, nostalgic theatre, backward Siân Adiseshiah is a senior lecturer in English Literature at the University of Lincoln. Her research interests include modern and contemporary British theatre and utopian studies. She is author of Churchill’s Socialism: Political Resistance in the Plays of Caryl Churchill. › ‘We Said We Wouldn’t Look Back’: Utopia and the backward glance in Dorothy Reynolds and Julian Slade’s Salad Days, Studies in Musical Theatre, glance 5.2, 149-161. Sama'a Al Hashimi Middlesex University, Lansdown Centre for Electronic Arts, Cadhill Campus, Barnet, Hertfordshire, EN4 8HT, United Kingdom Keywords performance, voice, interactivity, human-computer interaction Sama’a Al Hashimi was born in Bahrain in 1981. In 2002, she received her Bachelor of Science in Graphic Design (Major) and Fine Arts (Minor) from the Lebanese American University. She then spent a year in Bahrain where she worked for a few months as a graphic designer in a printing press, followed by working as a research and teaching assistant in the Department of Communication in the University of Bahrain (UOB). She was sponsored by UOB to pursue her postgraduate degree in the Lansdown Centre for Electronic Arts at Middlesex University, London where she completed her MA in Design for Interactive Media. She is also currently undertaking her Ph.D. research at the university, concerning the role of non-speech voice as input to interactive media. › Users as performers in vocal interactive media – the role of expressive voice visualisation, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 275-296. Fadi Mohammad AlGhawanmeh University of Jordan, Music Department, Amman, 11942, Jordan Keywords music, technology, Nay, Shabbaba Fadi Mohammad Al-Ghawanmeh was born in Jordan in 1985. He received a BA in Music (Arabian flute (Nay) performance) in 2010 and a BSc in Computer Engineering in 2008 from the University of Jordan. He won an Erasmus Mundus Scholarship to Berlin University of Technology in 2009, and was granted a scholarship from the University of Jordan to pursue his MA in Music Technology in North America. He has undertaken various international courses on cultural administration, IT for sustainable development of cultural heritage, IT project management, digital economy and entrepreneurship, digital musical signal analysis, and programming. He has participated in various international conferences and festivals. His current research interests are digital musical signal analysis, musical acoustics, music information retrieval, educational musical computer applications, and Arabian music theories and Arabian modes (Maqam). He speaks Arabic, English and French. › Educational tools based on MIR system for Arabian woodwinds, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 31-46. M. T Al-Ghawanmeh Music Department, Yarmouk University, 211-63 Irbid, Jordan Keywords music, technology, Nay, Shabbaba Mohammed T. Al-Gawanmeh was born in Jordan in 1956. He is currently the Dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts at Yarmouk University, Jordan. Al-Gawanmeh received a Ph.D. and an MA in Music Education from Hulwan University, Cairo. He also received a BA in Music from Yarmouk University, Irbed. Prior to this, he was a music teacher for about ten years starting just after obtaining an Intermediate Diploma in Music Education. His major previous work experiences include Dean of Jordan Academy of Music for four years, Head of the Jordanian Musical Heritage Collecting Project, Expert Consultant of the Music Education Ministry of Education Yemen Republic, Supervisor of several music programmes for Jordan TV, and a member of teaching staff at various Jordanian musical institutions. His major research interest is Jordanian Musical Heritage (rural, Bedouin, women’s, Sufi, musicians and singers).Al-Gawanmeh is the founder of Irbed Ensemble for Arabian Music. › Educational tools based on MIR system for Arabian woodwinds, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 31-46. Ann Cooper Albright Oberlin College Keywords body, improvisation, pedagogy, somatics, phenomenology A performer, choreographer and feminist scholar, Ann Cooper Albright is Professor of Dance and Theatre at Oberlin College. Combining her interests in dancing and cultural theory, she is involved in teaching a variety of dance, performance studies and gender studies courses that seek to engage students in both practices and theories of the body. She is the author of Modern Gestures: Abraham Walkowitz draws Isadora Duncan dancing (2010); Traces of Light: Absence and Presence in the Work of Loie Fuller (2007); Choreographing Difference: the Body and Identity in Contemporary Dance (1997) and co-editor of Moving History/Dancing Cultures (2001) and Taken By Surprise: Improvisation in Dance and Mind (2003), all published by Wesleyan University Press. › Training bodies to matter, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 143153. Christopher J Alfano McGill University, Department of Intergrated Studies in Education, 3700 McTavish St, Montreal, Quebec, Canada Chris is an active musician in the idioms of both classical and jazz music. He plays clarinet, saxophone and flute. In 1994, as well as being a high school band teacher, he founded an instrumental music programme for senior citizens offered at LaSalle Secondary School, Kingston. This programme is fully funded by the Ontario Ministry of Education and runs daily and incorporates adolescent music learners into the seniors’ music classes for a unique intergenerational learning Keywords social identity, community, ageing experience. He is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Integrated Studies in Education at McGill University, Montreal. His research studies focus on intergenerational learning and association. Chris was appointed to the rank of Major with the Canadian Air Force Reserve and held the position of Region Cadet Music Advisor from 1987 to 1994. He holds Baccalaureate degrees from Saint Francis Xavier University, Nova Scotia, and the University of Western Ontario. › Intergenerational learning in a high school environment, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 253-266. Paul Allain University of Kent, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NZ, United Kingdom Keywords performance education, Eastern performance techniques, exoticism, Butoh, Kathakali Paul Allain is Professor of Theatre and Performance at the University of Kent, Canterbury. He collaborated with the Gardzienice Theatre Association from 1989 to 1993 and published the book Gardzienice: Polish Theatre in Transition (1997). He co-edited the Cambridge Companion to Chekhov (2000) and his book The Art of Stillness: The Theatre Practice of Tadashi Suzuki was published by Methuen (2002) and Palgrave Macmillan, USA (2003). Routledge published his Companion to Theatre and Performance, co-written with Jen Harvie, in early 2006. Paul is currently researching the legacy of Grotowski’s work. He has worked extensively as a movement director, including at the Royal Court Theatre, the National Theatre and The Royal Shakespeare Company, most frequently with Katie Mitchell. Allain teaches using techniques derived from Grotowski-based work through Gardzienice. › On the shoulders of tradition from East and West: a conversation between Paul Allain and Frances Barbe, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 149-159. Ludivine Allegue Studio: Camino del Sacromonte Keywords painting, collaboration, corporeality, gesture, installation Ludivine Allegue is a painter and a video artist whose work investigates the nature and constitution of both individuality and conscience. She has a Ph.D. in Arts from the University Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne, she is also an associated artist and researcher at the Institut d'Esthétique des Arts et Technologies. During her Ph.D., she worked for several years with internationally acclaimed sculptor Jaume Plensa whose work she analysed in her Ph.D thesis. From 200506 she was a research associate of the PARIP project, Practice as Research in Performance, at the University of Bristol (UK). Recently, she worked with dancer and comedian Shahrokh Moshkin Ghalam (Théâtre National de la Comédie Française, Paris), British Choreographer Rosemary Lee, vocal artist Yvon Bonenfant (UK/ Canada) and composer Julius Fujak (Slovakia) on projects that explore transversality across visual arts, music and/or performance. › Textures and Translations: B(earth) in between Extended Voice and Visual Arts, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 237-256. David Allen Midland Actors Theatre, 25 Merrishaw Road, Northfields, Birmingham, West Midlands, B31 3SL, United Kingdom Keywords Stanislavski, Chekhov, Brecht, Edward Bond, Theatre in Education, Mantle of the Expert, Gregor Mendel, Disney David Allen is currently artistic director of the Midland Actors Theatre (MAT). He is the author of Stanislavsky for Beginners (1999) and Performing Chekhov (Routledge 2000). Productions for MAT include: Lady Chatterley’s Lover by David Calcutt (2001); The Children by Edward Bond (2004-5); The Mothers by David Calcutt and Camel Station by Trevor Griffiths (2006); The Good Person of Sezuan by Bertolt Brecht (2010). Recent articles in books and journals include: 'Mendel in Darwin's Shadow' (2010) and 'Going to the Centre: Edward Bond’s The Children' in Studies in Theatre and Performance (2007). Current research interests include: Brecht; Darwin and Mendel; Walt Disney; and Lewis Carroll. › ‘Going to the Centre’: Edward Bond's The Children, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 115-136. Jess Allen City of Bristol College/University of Plymouth, Dance Theatre Performance, United Kingdom › Written in the body: reflections on encounters with somatic practices in postgraduate dance training, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 215-224. Keywords dance training, somatic practices, body-mind centering, Alexander Technique, reflective writing Karryn Allen Arizona State University, 4029 E Devonshire Ave, Phoenix, AZ 85018, United States of America Keywords somatic movement, dance Karryn Allen has been a dance student and instructor in the Phoenix, Arizona area since 2001. She has years of experience teaching dance to a wide range of ages in the studio, school and community setting. Karryn has earned an Associates of Fine Arts Degree in dance from Scottsdale Community College, a Bachelor’s Degree in Secondary Dance Education from Ottawa University, and is currently working on pedagogy, student embodiment her Master of Fine Arts degree (M.F.A.) in dance as a second-year graduate student at Arizona State University. Her current professional interests include the use of somatic movement practices in dance pedagogy to further student embodiment and understanding of dance technique. › Somatic voyages: Exploring ego, self and possibilities through the Laban/Bartenieff framework, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 233-250. Jodie Allinson University of Glamorgan, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, University of Glamorgan, Atrium, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2FN, United Kingdom Based at the University of Glamorgan, Jodie Allinson is a Lecturer in Drama (Theatre & Media). Jodie was co-director of King Oedipus. › Audience journeys through multiple stories: Adapting King Oedipus for performance, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 69-92. Keywords media, drama, King Oedipus Peter Amsel Keywords composition, mental illness, creativity, bipolar Peter Amsel is a composer and writer who divides his time between the call of the muse and facing the ongoing road to recovery from bipolar affective disorder, which he has been living with for over twenty years. Peter has sought new meaning in life through advocacy for patients' rights and through writing about issues pertaining to the mental health community. He is currently working on a book about mental health recovery, as well as a number of musical compositions. He is an active participant on Twitter where he can often be found as @CrazyComposer or, on a whimsical side, channeling his cat as @MyCatSeuss. He contributed a chapter in Voices of Experience on personal recovery, published by Wiley. › Creativity and bipolar disorder: Living with mental illness, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 215-221. Erica E. Ander Erica Ander is Research Assistant on the ‘Heritage in Hospitals’ programme at University College London and a heritage consultant specializing in visitor studies and audience development. Her research Birkbeck College, University of London, Room G2, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom interests include qualitative methodologies to capture health and wellbeing outcomes in the museum sector. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords health, curating, hospital, therapy, heritage Kirstin Anderson University of Edinburgh,, The Institute for Music in Human and Social Development (IMHSD), Alison House, 12 Nicolson Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9DF, United Kingdom Kirstin Anderson earned a Bachelor of Arts in Music Education from Birmingham-Southern College in Birmingham, Alabama. She taught music at a parochial school in Harlem for five years and earned her Master of Arts in Music Education from Teachers College, Columbia University, in New York City. Kirstin recently designed a workbook on teaching music in prisons as part of a Knowledge Transfer grant from the University of Edinburgh, where she is currently a Ph.D. student. Keywords music, Scotland, prison, education, self-esteem › Engaging Scottish young offenders in education through music and art, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 47-64. Joseph Anderson University of Hull, United Kingdom Keywords British Acousmatics, signal-processing algorithms, music technology Joseph Anderson is a composer whose art synthesizes the approaches of ‘classical computer music’ and the ‘British Acousmatics’, in that his compositional work is focused on acousmatic music created through self-authored tools and signal-processing algorithms. Since 1997, his principal output has been rendered in periphonic (full 3D) Ambisonic surround sound. He has been employed in a variety of industrial sector roles, including a posting as a DSP design engineer at Analog Devices Audio Rendering Technology Center in Silicon Valley. Since 2003 Anderson has lectured in music and music technology at the University of Hull. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 67-86. Vicky Angelaki Birmingham City University, School of English, City North Campus, Perry Barr, Birmingham, B42 2SU, United Kingdom Dr Vicky Angelaki is a lecturer in English and Drama at the School of English, Birmingham City University. Her research focuses on contemporary British theatre, phenomenology, aesthetics and politics. She holds degrees from Aristotle University of Thessaloniki (BA English Language and Literature) and Royal Holloway, University of London (PG Cert in Skills of Teaching to Inspire Learning, MRes in Keywords British theatre, phenomenology, Martin Crimp Theatre, Ph.D.). Her doctoral thesis (Department of Drama & Theatre, Royal Holloway, 2009) focused on defamiliarization in the work of Martin Crimp and produced an innovative critical/theoretical understanding of the theatre of one of the foremost British playwrights active today. She has presented papers at a number of prestigious European and UK theatre-related conferences and published extensively in the areas of recent and contemporary British and European theatre and theory. Vicky Angelaki is a member of IFTR, CDE and TaPRA. › Lessons from Harold Pinter, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 267273. Matthew C. Applegate University Campus Suffolk, Waterfront Building, Neptune Quay, Ipswich, IP4 1QJ, United Kingdom Keywords programming, music production, code-breaking Matthew is a professional multidisciplinary artist and lecturer, a patron of the Access To Music Centre in Norwich, a Science & Engineering Ambassador for Suffolk and a member of STEMNET (Science, Technology Engineering and Mathematics Network). As PixelH8, he is known internationally for programming some of the world's oldest and rarest computers as well as rewiring children's toys to make new musical instruments and musical compositions. He has produced music software used by Grammy-winner Damon Albarn and Grammynominee Imogen Heap. › Cultural perceptions,ownership and interactionwith re-purposed musicalinstruments, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 93106. Sarah Artt Queen Margaret University, 23 Lutton Place, EH8 9PD, Edinburgh, United Kingdom Keywords screen adaptation, Henry James, mise-en-scène Sarah Artt is lecturer in Film and Media in the Department of Social Sciences, Media and Communication at Queen Margaret University. Her Ph.D. thesis dealt with the symbolic function of art and dress in screen adaptations of the work of Henry James and Edith Wharton and migrant/diasporic cinema directors: Fatih Akin, Mira Nair Dance in cinema. Her publications include: 'Rocky Horror Picture Show as selfreflexive musical' in Jeffrey Weinstock (ed.) Reading Rocky Horror (forthcoming from Palgrave in 2008) and Art of the Past: Adapting Henry James's The Golden Bowl. › Art of the Past: Adapting Henry James’s The Golden Bowl, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 5-16. Awo Mana Asiedu University of Ghana, P. O. Box LG 25, Legon., Ghana Keywords audience, Femi Osofisan, interactivity Awo Mana Asiedu (née Ametewee) is a senior lecturer in Theatre Arts and Acting Director of The School of Performing Arts at the University of Ghana. Research interests include audience reception, African dramatic literature and performance, and the uses of theatre for purposes other than just entertainment. Her publications include; ‘Slavery and folklore in the plays of Ama Ata Aidoo’ in Michael Walling (ed.), Theatre and Slavery; 'Making Use of the Stage in West Africa: The Role of Audiences in the Production of Efficacious Theatre' in Studies in Theatre and performance, Vol.28, 3; and ‘Returning to the “Motherland”, Illusions and Realities: A Study of Aidoo’s The Dilemma of a Ghost and Onwueme’s Legacies/The Missing Face’ in The Legon Journal of Humanities Vol. 19 pp.1-19. Her current research project concerns regional trends in contemporary African theatre and performance. › Making use of the stage in West Africa: The role of audiences in the production of efficacious theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 223-236. Cathy Augustin Berea Lutheran School, 9308 Rich Valley Boulevard, Inver Grove Heights, MN, 55077, United States of America Keywords community music, adult education, music Cathy Augustin has taught music in grades preschool through eighth grade in New Mexico and Minnesota for eighteen years. She has held her current position of teaching classroom and instrumental music at Berea Lutheran School in Inver Grove Heights since 1993. Additionally, she has directed the South of the River Community Band since 1995 fostering membership growth to over 60 members. She completed her undergraduate work at South Dakota State University in Brookings, South Dakota with a Bachelor of Music Education Degree and completed her work towards a Master of Arts Degree in Music Education, with an emphasis in instrumental music, at the University of Saint Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota. She is an active member of the Music Educators National Conference, Minnesota Music Educators Association and the Minnesota Band Directors Association. › A descriptive study to determine the opinions of community band members regarding the effectiveness of comprehensive musicianship, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 175-183. Philip Auslander Georgia Institute of Technology, School of Literature, Communication & Culture, Skiles Building, 686 Philip Auslander is a Professor in the School of Literature, Communication and Culture at the Georgia Institute of Technology, USA. Philip Auslander's primary research interest is in performance, especially in relation to music, media, and technology. He has written on aesthetic and cultural performances as diverse as theatre, Cherry Street, Atlanta, GA 303320165, United States of America performance art, music, stand-up comedy, robotic performance, and courtroom procedures. He is the author of five books and editor or coeditor of two collections. His most recently published books are Performing Glam Rock: Gender and Theatricality in Popular Music (2006) and the second edition of Liveness: Performance in a Mediatized Culture (2008). In addition to his work on performance, Auslander contributes art criticism regularly to ArtForum and other publications. He is the editor of The Art Section: An Online Journal of Art and Cultural Commentary. Keywords machine, Internet, liveness, installation, sample › At the Listening Post, or, do machines perform?, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 5-10. Frances Babbage University of Sheffield, Theatre Workshop, Western Bank, Sheffield, S10 2TN, United Kingdom Keywords archiving, adaptation, Theatre Workshop Frances Babbage is based in the Theatre Workshop at the University of Sheffield and convenes the School´s MA in Theatre & Performance. Frances has trained with numerous companies including Forced Entertainment, Welfare State International, Polish physical theatre company Song of the Goat, Station House Opera and Told by an Idiot, and has incorporated these methods within her teaching and creative work. Frances previously edited a special issue of Contemporary Theatre Review entitled Working Without Boal: Digressions and Developments in the Theatre of the Oppressed (1995). Current research interests include devising, documentation and practices of archiving; adaptation studies; applied theatre and Theatre of the Oppressed; women's writing for performance. She regularly engages in practice as research, as practitioner, teacher and examiner. › The Female Quixote or The Adventures of Arabella: concerning a Narrative containing much that is Dramatic, and in which an Audience is expected to be extremely interested (and in which the Footnotes are not the least Part), Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.3, 150-161. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 185-194. Jane Bacon The University of Northampton, School of the Arts, St Georges Ave, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords performance, creativity, imagination, methodology, felt sense, Practice as Research (PaR) Dr. Jane Bacon is Reader and Divisional Leader in Performance Studies at The University of Northampton, UK. Her research spans a spectrum from written, performative and screen-based articulations in the territory she calls ‘self as creative source’ for practice-led research in performance. Her publications and performances have taken her on a journey from improvised dance and screen work to auto-ethnography, and she now incorporates Jung’s ‘active imagination’ and Gendlin’s Focusing as well as mindfulness and notions of the spirit in the development of creative methodologies for Practice as Research (PaR). She is also a Focusing Trainer, Authentic Movement Practitioner and Advanced Candidate of the Independent Group of Analytical Psychologists and Director of The Choreographic Lab and Editor of the Choreographic Practices Journal. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 179-188. › It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 215-228. › The voice of her body: Somatic practices as a basis for creative research methodology, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 63-74. › Articulating choreographic practices, locating the field: An introduction, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 3-19. Helen Bailey University of Bedfordshire, Faculty of Creative Arts & Technology, Polhill Campus, Polhill Avenue, Bedford, Bedfordshire, MK41 2BZ, United Kingdom Helen Bailey is a dance artist and academic. She is Artistic Director of dance theatre company, Ersatz Dance and Principal Lecturer in Dance at the University of Bedfordshire. She trained at the Laban Centre London, and then she initially worked as a freelance dance artist and choreographer. › Ersatz dancing: Negotiating the live and mediated in digital performance practice, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 151-166. Keywords dance, choreography, video, digital media, digital arts John S. Bak Nancy-Université, 4 Allée des Gentes Dames, Fléville devant Nancy, 54710, France Keywords The Indian Princess, musical comedy, Pocahontas myth, early American theatre, nationalism John S. Bak is Maître de Conférences at the Université Nancy 2 in France, where he teaches courses in translation, literary journalism, American drama, and American Gothic. His published articles have appeared in Theatre Journal, Mississippi Quarterly, Journal of American Drama and Theatre, The Tennessee Williams Literary Journal, American Drama, Journal of Religion and Theatre, South Atlantic Review, Studies in Musical Theatre, Cercles, and Coup de Théâtre. His most recent books include Ernest Hemingway, Tennessee Williams, and Queer Masculinities (Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2009), and International Literary Journalism: Historical Traditions and Transnational Influences (University of Massachusetts Press, 2010). › James Nelson Barker’s The Indian Princess: the role of the operatic melodrama in the establishment of an American belles-lettres, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 175-193. Hilary Baker Keywords American musicals, David Henry Hwang, Baz Luhrmann, Avenue Q Hilary Baker received her Ph.D. in music history from the University of Pennsylvania in 2010. Her dissertation, ‘Stage(d) Communities’, which she is currently revising into a manuscript, focused on recent American musicals. Her professional theatrical credits include David Henry Hwang’s adaptation of Flower Drum Song and Baz Luhrmann’s version of La Bohème. › From Broadway to Vegas: The triumphs and tribulations of Avenue Q, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 71-83. Camille Baker Brunel University, School of Engineering and Design, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords mobile media, pixel aesthetics, digital arts, documentary, performance, digital media Camille Baker has a fascination with all things emotional, embodied, felt, sensed, the visceral, physical, relational and participatory, using video, communication devices and biofeedback. She has been on a continuous quest to work with new technologies, expressive methods, via art and performance, in order to find new ways to connect people with each other, over distance better and in more embodied, emotional ways. Her recent work involves a mobile performative VJing project called MINDtouch, and recent Ph.D. graduate with the SMARTlab at the University of East London, researching Mobile Performance Media. Her research interests include: mobile devices, video art, live cinema, performance and interactive media, responsive environments, media art installation, telematics, new media curating and networked communities. › ‘Liveness’ and ‘presence’ in bio-networked mobile media performance practices: emerging perspectives, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 117-136. › MINDtouch embodied ephemeral transference: Mobile media performance research, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 97-116. Alexandra Balandina Keywords conflict resolution, culture, music festivals, inter-ethnic relationships, post-Yugoslav era, ethnomusicology Alexandra Balandina is currently lecturer of ethnomusicology at the Technological Education Institute of Epirus (Greece), in the Faculty of Music Technology, Department of Traditional Music. Her qualifications include BA in Social Anthropology and Social Policy (Panteion University, Greece), MMus and Ph.D. in Ethnomusicology (Goldsmiths College, University of London). She has conducted extensive fieldwork in Iran and former Yugoslavia. She is also a performer; playing on Middle-Eastern percussion instruments such as the bendir (frame drums) and the Iranian tombak (goblet shaped drum). Alexandra has performed with renowned musicians, including Ross Daly and his ensemble Labyrinth, and the Greek–Kurdish–Iranian ensemble Persepolis. Her main areas of research interest are: music censorship, music and politics, organology, performance theory, applied ethnomusicology, social anthropology, Middle East, Eastern Europe and the Balkans. › Music and conflict transformation in the post-Yugoslav era: empowering youth to develop harmonic inter-ethnic relationships in Kumanovo, Macedonia, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 229-244. Jorge Balça Keywords counter-tenor, opera training, opera production Jorge Balça trained as a counter-tenor and actor in Portugal, and performed extensively in Portugal, Spain and France before moving to the UK in 1998, when he started focusing on directing during his BA Performing Arts – Drama at Middlesex University. Since then, Jorge leads workshops and research projects in the areas of physical theatre, interdisciplinary performance and cross-culturalism. Back at Middlesex University, Jorge finished his MA in Theatre Directing in 2007, which took him to GITIS (Moscow) to study Meyerhold and Biomechanics. › A dead baby and a scar, but [] no genitalia in sight. Is Bieito's Jenfa really a Bieito?, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 141-154. Henrietta Bannerman London Contemporary Dance School, 17 Duke's Rd, City of London, WC1H 9PY, United Kingdom Keywords Graham-based technique, somatics, Mary Fulkerson, Gadamer, dance, ballet Dr Henrietta Bannerman is Head of Research and Academic Practice at the London Contemporary Dance School, where she tutors and supervises postgraduate students who are emerging professional dancers and choreographers. She trained in several dance and theatre disciplines, but concentrated on ballet and later went to New York to study the Martha Graham technique. She continued her modern dance training at the London Contemporary Dance School under the artistic directorship of Robert Cohan. After a career of teaching dance and choreographing, she entered academic life, gaining a B.A. (Hons) in English and Dance and a Ph.D. in contemporary dance. She has an international reputation for her articles on Martha Graham, which have appeared in journals such as Dance Research and the Dance Research Journal. › A question of somatics the search for a common framework for twenty-firstcentury contemporary dance pedagogy: Graham and Release-based techniques, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 5-19. Fiona Bannon School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords walking, social choreography, sensation,methodical practice, lived inquiry, dialogue Fiona Bannon (Ph.D.) is a senior lecturer in Dance in the School of Performance and Cultural Industries at the University of Leeds. She is Programme Leader for the MA in Choreography and contributes to the teaching of research methods, choreographic development and collaborative projects at undergraduate level. Her research interests address questions of creative collaborative art making, exploration of aesthetic development, sensory experiences of performance and the everyday. She has published on experiential learning and knowledge in dance, collaborative research methods and the performance of walking. Fiona is a member of the performance collective ‘Architects of the Invisible’, a group that explores freeplay collaborative practice. Current doctoral student research includes: exploration of reciprocal conversational dynamics in improvisation; the performance/presence of the choreographer in cross art durational performance; autoethnography as a method to generate new knowledge and enhanced educational management. › Articulations: Walking as daily dance practice, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 97-109. Stephen Baranski New York University, United States of America Keywords music education, Morecambe, improvisation, community music, voice, education Stephen Baranski is a doctoral student at New York University. In addition to presenting at North Texas State University, New York University's Forum on Assessment and Arts Education, and TI:ME's National Convention, his vocal groups have performed at Connecticut Music Educators Association conferences. Steve currently accompanies the New York City-based ensemble the West Side Singers, and has served as a pianist on Broadway for Phantom of the Opera, and off-Broadway for the Sullivan Street production of The Fantasticks. For his development and application of technology-based innovation in learning, Mr. Baranski received the Connecticut Distance Learning Consortium's Teacher Innovation Award. Steve is a cooperating teacher and mentor for the Westport, Connecticut school district where he currently teaches. He holds a MM from the Manhattan School of Music. › Book Review, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 131-. Frances Barbe United Kingdom Keywords performance education, Frances Barbe is a movement practitioner whose work is informed by her experience with Japanese butoh dance, and the actor training method of Tadashi Suzuki. She has trained in Suzuki’s method with Frank Theatre since 1992, and in Butoh with various teachers, including Tadashi Endo who she has performed with since 1997. These Eastern performance techniques, exoticism, Butoh, Kathakali Japanese approaches are combined with her aesthetic heritage in European dance and theatre, including ballet and modern dance. She joined the School of Drama, Film and Visual Arts at the University of Kent in 2001 through a Daiwa / AHRC Creative Fellowship, and in 2004 was offered the post of lecturer. She was artistic director of the Daiwa International Butoh Festival in 2005, and has run Theatre Training Initiative in London since 2000, dedicated to a variety of training methods, including Butoh and Suzuki. She has her own company, Fran Barbe Dance Theatre. › On the shoulders of tradition from East and West: a conversation between Paul Allain and Frances Barbe, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 149-159. Joel Luis Barbosa Escola de Musica da Universidade Federal da Bahia, Rua Basílio da Gama, s/n, Canela, Campus Universitário do Canela, Salvador, CEP: 40140-060, Brazil Keywords music, education, collaboration, instrumental music education Joel Luis Barbosa is Professor Titular at the Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil. He obtained his DMA at the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington. As clarinettist, he has performed in Austria, United States, Colombia and Brazil. His work with bands includes playing, teaching, arranging and conducting in several festivals and conferences in Brazil and Colombia. He has created, coordinated and worked in several projects of music education with social orientation. At the Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil, he works as clarinet professor, advisor for doctoral candidates and researcher on performance and music education. His publications include a band method book and articles published by ISME, IJME, ABEM, ANPPOM and PPGMUS. › Instrumental instruction in community bands from Bahia, Brazil, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 399-404. Vasso Barboussi University of Peloponnese, Department of Theatre Studies Keywords dance, improvisation, body, somatics, Greece Vasso Barboussi studied dance at the Rallou Manou School and physical education at the University of Athens. She continued her training in New York and studied improvisation, Ideokinesis, BMC, Alexander technique and Laban analysis. She received her MA from Columbia University Teachers College, and her Ph.D. from the University of Thessaly. She has performed with the ‘Greek Chorodrama’ and since 1984, has presented her professional work with the dance group ‘Okiroy’, which she formed. She collaborated with the National Greek Theatre as choreographer in several plays including those by Euripides, Sophocles, etc. Until 2005, she taught as an assistant professor at the Department of Early Childhood Education at the University of Thessaly. Since then, she has been an associate professor in the Department of Theatre Studies in the University of Peloponnese (Nafplion). › Towards an innovative model of teaching Greek traditional dances, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 155-168. Martin Barker University of Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and TV, Penglais Campus, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Keywords teaching film, media literacy, vernacular concepts, moral controversies Martin Barker is Professor of Film and Television Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. He is the author of a number of books, of which probably best-known is Ill Effects: the Media-Violence Debate (co-edited with Julian Petley). He was director of the major international audience research project into the reception of The Lord of the Rings (2003-4) whose results were published (Watching The Lord of the Rings) by Peter Lang in 2007. In 2007 he also directed a research project for the British Board of Film Classification into audience responses to sexual violence on screen, whose outcomes can be found on their website. › , theatre audiences, and the idea of ‘liveness’, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.1, 21-40. Deborah Barkun Ursinus College, P.O. Box 1000, 601 East Main Street, Collegeville, PA, 19426-1000, United States of America Keywords digital media, knitting, craft, art, women Deborah Barkun is an Assistant Professor of Modern and Contemporary Art History at Millersville University of Pennsylvania. She holds a BFA. from Carnegie-Mellon University in printmaking and an MA and Ph.D. in History of Art from Bryn Mawr College. She is the recipient of a series of research and teaching awards including a Whiting Fellowship in the Humanities (2004 – 2005). She has presented papers at Vanderbilt University, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, and the Philadelphia Art Alliance. Her essay 'Four-letter Words: LOVE and AIDS in the Age of Appropriation and Proliferation' will appear in the forthcoming Eros and Ambiguity: Essays on Love throughout the Ages. She is currently working on a book entitled Art, AIDS, and Collective Identity: The Collaborative Body of General Idea. › Orienteering with double moss: The cartographies of half/angel's The Knitting Map, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 183-196. Matthew Barnard Independent Composer, Sound Artist and Researcher Keywords acousmatic composition, radio art, acoustic ecology, binaural method Dr. Matthew Barnard is a composer, sound artist and researcher. His research interests lie in acousmatic composition, radio art and acoustic ecology, revolving around the binaural method of recording and reproduction, its aesthetic implications, advantages and use in the composition and phonographical process. › REVIEWS, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 91-104. Hazel Barnes University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg campus, King George V Avenue, Glenwood, Durban, 4041, South Africa Keywords applied drama, healing and development Hazel Barnes is a Senior Research Associate in Drama and Performance Studies on the Pietermaritzburg campus of the University of KwaZulu-Natal. She is also a Mellon Visiting Scholar at the University of Cape Town and Consultant and Member of the Research Committee of Drama for Life and visiting lecturer, Division of Dramatic Arts, Witwatersrand University. She has a particular interest in Applied Drama for healing and development but has also directed and acted. › Where Do We Go From Here? : developing women's playscripts in postapartheid Southern Africa, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.1, 31-42. Vincent L. Barnett Keywords publicity effects, A.E.W. Mason, Baroness Orczy, Sir Oswald Stoll, history, art, propaganda, Russia Vincent L. Barnett's research interests include the history of crossmedia adaptation in the United Kingdom and the United States in the 1920s and 1930s, and also the wider economic and aesthetic history of cinema in the West across the twentieth century. He recently completed work as a Research Fellow on a three-year AHRC-funded project in media history at Bedfordshire University, and is currently investigating the corporate background to the financing of film production at RKO in the period 1938–1942. His other main research interest is the history of ideas, and in 2009 he published the volume on Marx in the Routledge Historical Biographies series. › The commercial effects of the adaptation of novels into films in the United Kingdom, 1910–1940, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 528. Brydie-Leigh Bartleet Dr. Brydie-Leigh Bartleet is a lecturer in Research and Music Literature at the Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University. She Griffith University, Queensland Conservatorium, South Bank, PO Box 3428, South Brisbane QLD, 4101, Australia was research fellow on the Australia Research Council funded project Sound Links (2007–2008), one of Australia's largest studies into the dynamics of community music. Her recent research focuses on a crosscultural collaborative project with Indigenous musicians from Barkly Regional Arts in Central Australia and undergraduate music and education students from Brisbane. She is a Commissioner on the International Society for Music Education's Community Music Activities Commission and the Councillor for Research on the Music Council of Australia and is involved in Australia's Community Music Network. As a community music facilitator she has conducted a number of bands, orchestras, choirs and jazz ensembles from Australia, Thailand, Singapore and Taiwan. Keywords community music, learning dynamics, education › Sound Links: Exploring the social, cultural and educational dynamics of musical communities in Australia, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 335-356. › Connections in China: Harmonizing stories of community music from around the world, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 7-14. Sarah J. Bartolome Louisiana State University, School of Music, Baton Rouge, LA 708032504, United States of America Keywords The Revels, community music, music education, participation, traditional music Sarah J. Bartolome is an Assistant Professor of Music Education at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. A specialist in music for children, Sarah has taught general music and directed children’s choirs in both Boston and Seattle. A frequent clinician, she has presented workshops for music educators at local and regional conferences across the United States. She has contributed articles to such publications as Research Studies in Music Education, The Music Educator’s Journal, and The Kodaly Envoy. Research interests include ethnomusicology and Music Education, choral culture globally, instrumental music practice, child and adolescent musical values, and community music. › John Langstaff: community musician and reveler, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 157-167. Keren Barzilay-Shechter Lesley University, 5 Phillips Place, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 2138, United States of America Keywords expressive arts, therapy, conflict resolution, psychodrama, Keren Barzilay-Shechter, MA is an Israeli expressive therapist specializing in psychodrama. For more than fifteen years, she has worked with children, adolescents and adults in different settings such as community clinics, schools and mental institutions. She is currently a doctoral candidate in expressive therapy where she is researching the role of the defense mechanisms in the Israeli psyche within the context of the Israeli–Palestinian conflict. She has special interest in the possible contribution of expressive therapy in enhancing and therapeutic action, methodology, group psychotherapy, Israeli – Palestinian youth processing these defenses. Barzilay-Shechter is a faculty member at Lesley University. › The Artsbridge group, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 333-339. Glenna Batson Winston-Salem State University Retired, Department of Physical Therapy, 434 Fearrington Post, Pittsboro, NC, 27312, United States of America Glenna Batson, PT, ScD, MA, was the first person trained by Irene Dowd in Ideokinesis in 1977. She is a certified teacher of the Alexander Technique (since 1989), and has taught on dance science and somatics for over three decades. She was in residence at the Trinity Laban Conservatoire of Music and Dance in London in 2009 as a Fulbright Senior Specialist. Keywords reflexivity, first person, intention, rest, somatic(s) education, dance, performance, poetry, text, neuroscience, synthesis › The somatic practice of intentional rest in dance education preliminary steps towards a method of study, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 177197. Alice Bayliss University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords playful arenas, hyperphysical interfaces, sensing, tangibles, club culture Alice Bayliss is a lecturer in Applied Theatre and Intervention at the School of Performance and Cultural Industries, University of Leeds. She teaches on both undergraduate and postgraduate programmes and specialises in exploring interactive, democratic performance in unanticipated performance arenas – namely underground clubs, parties and festivals. She has published widely in the field of performance interaction and design and is currently involved in the EPSRC/AHRC funded project Design for the 21st Century. Her collaboration with Jennifer Sheridan has spanned over four years. Together they formed the performance company 'Floorspace' and are co-chairs and founders of the (re)Actor conference series on Digital Live Art (www.DigitalLiveArt.co.uk). › New shapes on the dance floor: influencing ambient sound and vision with computationally augmented poi, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 67-. › Editorial, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 217-220. › The interior life of iPoi: Objects that entice witting transitions in performative behaviour, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 17-36. › Emergent objects: Designing through performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 269-280. › Editorial, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 3-6. Nancy Beardall Lesley University, 5 Phillips Place, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States of America Keywords relational development, dance therapy, movement therapist Nancy Beardall, Ph.D., B.C.-D.M.T., C.M.A., L.M.H.C., is the Dance/Movement Therapy Coordinator at Lesley University, Cambridge, MA. As a dance/movement therapist, Certified Movement Analyst and educator, Nancy’s work has focused on dance, dance therapy and social/emotional and relational development using the expressive arts in the public schools. She has developed numerous curricula and co-authored Making Connections: Building Community and Gender Dialogue in Secondary Schools with Janet Surrey and Stephen Bergman. › Spirals dancing and the Spiral Integrated Learning Process: Promoting an embodied knowing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 7-23. Sue Becker Teesside University, School of Social Sciences & Law, Teesside University, Borough Road, Middlesbrough, TS1 3BA, United Kingdom Keywords television comedy, racism, Little Britain, Matt Lucas, David Walliams Dr. Sue Becker is a social psychologist working at Teesside University. She completed her Ph.D. at Loughborough University looking at the ways in which arguments around child contact arrangements are negotiated and managed discursively. She specializes in the use of qualitative data corpora, for example naturally occurring talk and text; visual images and haptics boxes to explore and unpack participants’ understandings of sensitive and abstract topics such as health and happiness. Becker has research interests in qualitative psychology including social stigma and the use of laughter and humour to ameliorate and manage both perceived and enacted stigma in interaction. › Racism in comedy reappraised: Back to Little England?, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 191-200. Anastasia Belina The University of Leeds, Music Department, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords Taneyev, Oresteia, Anastasia Belina has a Ph.D. from the University of Leeds, where she completed a dissertation entitled, 'A Critical Re-Evaluation of Taneyev’s Oresteia'. Anastasia is a writer and translator for Naxos and Toccata Classics recording labels, and a regular presenter of talks and lectures on Russian music. Her research interests include Russian and European opera, Soviet music, and Wagner. Aeschylus, Clytemnestra, Cassandra › Representation of Clytemnestra and Cassandra in Taneyev's Oresteia, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 61-81. Cindy L. Bell Hofstra University, Department of Music, 101 New Academic Buliding, Hempstead, New York, NY 11549, United States of America Keywords community, choir, adult education, music, education In 2008, Cindy L. Bell joined Hofstra University in New York as Associate Professor of Music Education and Director of the University Choir. This appointment followed an eight year position at Queens College, City University of New York. A specialist in choral music education, teacher training and community choirs, she has presented clinics at NYSSMA, MENC and ACDA Eastern Division and National Conventions, and the ISME 2002 Community Music Seminar in Holland. Dr. Bell is published in music journals including Music Educators Journal, Bulletin for the Council of Research in Music Education, Journal of Music Teacher Education, and International Journal of Research in Choral Singing and guest conducts choirs of all ages. She also directs the Mariners Chorus at the US Merchant Marine Academy. › Toward a definition of a community choir, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 229-241. George Belliveau University of British Columbia, Department of Language and Literacy Education, c/o George Belliveau, Main Mall, Vancouver, V6T 1Z4, Canada Keywords performance, research, ethics, inner voices, ethnic studies, theatre George Belliveau is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in Theatre/Drama Education. His research interests include drama and social justice (bullying), theatre teacher education, drama and L2 learning, drama across the curriculum, Canadian theatre and research-based theatre. His work has been published in journals such as International Journal of Education and the Arts, Arts and Learning Research Journal, Canadian Journal of Education, English Quarterly, Theatre Research in Canada, Active Learning in Higher Education, among others. His co-authored book with Lynn Fels, Exploring Curriculum: Performative Inquiry, Role Drama and Learning (2008) is published by Pacific Educational Press. › Whose story is it anyway? Exploring ethical dilemmas in performed research, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 85-95. Sima Belmar Sima Belmar is a doctoral candidate in performance studies at the University of California, Berkeley. University of California-Berkeley, 1908 Parker Street, Berkeley, CA 94704, United States of America › Triple take: Practicing Hegel, reading Alexander, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 131-142. Keywords performance studies, inhibition, mediation, sublation, habit Harmony Bench Ohio State University Keywords Interet, dance, archiving, choreography Harmony Bench is Assistant Professor of Dance at The Ohio State University. Harmony received her Ph.D. in Culture and Performance from UCLA; she also holds degrees in Performance Studies (MA) from NYU and in Ballet (BFA) and Women’s Studies (BA) from the University of Utah. Her publications appear in Forum Modernes Theater, The International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, and Extensions: The Online Journal for Embodiment and Technology. She is currently on the editorial board of the newly created Screendance Journal, which aims to foster sustained intellectual discourse around issues of dance created for screen media. Harmony’s current research projects include mobile and social media as sites for choreographic inquiry and analysis, including the impact of communications technologies on movement patterns and gestures. › Computational choreographies: performance in dance online, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 155-169. Steve Benford University of Nottingham, Department of Computer Science,, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United Kingdom Keywords mixed reality performance, interactive art, archiving, architecture, metadata, replay, research Steve Benford is Professor of Collaborative Computing in the Mixed Reality Laboratory at Nottingham, where he explores novel interaction and communication technologies for rich and dynamic social interaction, focusing on the potential of ubiquitous computing to enhance the creative industries. For more than ten years now this has involved working with artists, ethnographers and scholars from the arts and humanities to create, tour and study a series of mixed reality performances. He is directing EPSRC's Doctoral Training Centre in Ubiquitous Computing for the Digital Economy, leading the MRL's Platform grant in the Widespread Adoption of Ubiquitous Computing and directing the Creator Digital Economy Cluster; he is also Head of the School of Computer Science. › Riders Have Spoken: A practice-based approach to developing an information architecture for the archiving and replay of a mixed reality performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 209-223. John Bennett Liverpool Hope University, Department of Drama and Theatre Studies, Haigh Street, Liverpool, Merseyside, L3 8QB, United Kingdom John Bennett is a senior lecturer in Drama and Theatre Studies at Liverpool Hope University. He studied at Bretton Hall College in the late 1970s and appeared in the first production of John Godber’s Bouncers at the Edinburgh Festival in 1977. He has lectured and published on various aspects of Godber’s work and is currently researching contemporary popular theatre in Liverpool and Hull. Keywords Brighton, devised theatre, Godber, British theatre, popular culture › Three careful owners: Divergent methodologies and shifting critical perceptions of the Hull Truck Theatre Company, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 273-288. Emma Bennett Keywords poetry, sculpture, comedy Emma Bennett is a London-based writer and artist. She has co-created a body of acclaimed performance work, which formed one-third of a collaborative project ‘These Horses’, which has toured throughout the United Kingdom and Germany. Her solo work is mainly text-based, and explores the intersection between poetry, sculpture and comedy. › Dog, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 13-18. Jane Bentley University of Strathclyde, 16 Richmond Street, Glasgow, G1 1XQ, United Kingdom Keywords community music, mental health, song, worship music, choir, religion For Jane, it is more fun to do music with people, than for them. To this end, she gained a first class BA in Community Arts at the University of Strathclyde, followed by a Ph.D. in musical interaction and participation. She is a freelance community musician, working primarily in mental health, social inclusion, education, and church music contexts. She has a particular research interest in the social and communicative affordances of music making, and musical entrainment. › Community; authenticity; growth: The role of musical participation in the Iona Community's island centres, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 71-77. Richard Berger Bournemouth University, Media School, Talbot Campus, Fern Barrow, Poole, Dorset, BH12 5BB, United Kingdom Richard Berger is Reader in Media & Education and Head of Postgraduate Research at the Media School, Bournemouth University, UK. › ‘Are There Any More at Home Like You?’: Rewiring Superman, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 87-101. Keywords heteroglossia, remediation, rewiring, transmedia, videogame Gunter Berghaus University of Bristol, Department of Drama: Theatre, Film, Television, Cantocks Close, Bristol, BS8 1UP, United Kingdom Keywords avant-garde, futurism, Italian futurism Günter Berghaus was, for many years, a Reader in Theatre History and Performance Studies and is now is a Senior Research Fellow at the University of Bristol. He has directed numerous plays from the classical and modern repertoire and has been organizer of several international conferences. He has published some 20 books on various aspects of theatre history, performance studies and the avant-garde. He is a leading expert on Italian Futurism and edits the International Yearbook of Futurism Studies. His current project is a bibliographic handbook, International Futurism, 1945-2009, which lists some 25,000 studies concerned with the artists who were active in the movement and with aesthetic genres and media in which Futurism exercised a particularly noteworthy influence. › Artaud's Jet de Sang: a Critical Post-Production Analysis, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.1, 4-17. Marsha Berry School of Creative Media and the Design Research Institute, Geoplaced Knowledge Program, RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia Keywords digital media, locative media, mediatization, networking, urban space Dr. Marsha Berry is an artist and a researcher. She teaches narrative and interactive design for new media for undergraduate degrees in the School of Creative Media at RMIT University, Australia. Marsha supervises MA and Ph.D. postgraduate students across a range of research topics concerned with new media, narrative and mobility. Her art practice has included performing arts, video art and photo media. Recently, she has explored notions of memory, place and displacement through video art, photography and evolved images. Her current research investigates mobile media, urban fields, geoplaced knowledge and postmemory. › Locative media: geoplaced tactics of resistance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 101-116. Russ Bestley London College of Communication, United Kingdom Keywords graphic design research methods, information design, British popular culture, alternative music Dr. Russell Bestley is a Principal Lecturer at the London College of Communication, where he is currently Head of Postgraduate Graphic Design Programme. His areas of specialist interest include graphic design research methods, information design and British popular culture, in particular late twentieth century popular and alternative music. He has co-authored and designed a number of publications, including Visual Research: An Introduction to Research Methodologies in Graphic Design (AVA Academia, 2004, revised 2nd edition 2011), Up Against the Wall: International Poster Design (RotoVision, 2002) and Experimental Layout (RotoVision, 2001), and has contributed articles to publications including Eye magazine, Zed, Émigré, The National Grid and the Oxford Encyclopaedia of the Modern World. His Ph.D. thesis, entitled ‘Hitsville UK: Punk Rock and Graphic Design in the Faraway Towns, 1976–84’, wasThe Art of Punk › From ‘London’s Burning’ to ‘Sten Guns in Sunderland’, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 41-71. Simon Biggs Edinburgh College of Art, Research, Lauriston Place, Edinburgh, EH3 9DF, United Kingdom Keywords digital arts, interactive media, electronic literature, new media, critical theory, digital culture, augmented reality Simon Biggs is a visual artist who has worked within the digital arts since the late 1970s. His work engages themes around social and personal ontologies through an engagement with interactive systems and situated artworks. He has collaborated with choreographers such as Stephen Petronio, Sarah Rubidge and Sue Hawksley, composers such as Hans Peter Kuhn, Stuart Jones, Jon Rose and Garth Paine and scientists in a number of disciplines at laboratories in the United Kingdom, United States and Australia. He is also an author and curator active in the area of new media arts and techno-cultural studies. He is currently Professor at Edinburgh College of Art. › Memory maps in interactive dance environments, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 123-138. Johannes Birringer Brunel University, School of Arts, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords collaboration, music, technology, multimedia, dance, theatre, video, performance, digital arts Johannes Birringer is professor of Performance Technologies in the School of Arts at Brunel University (London) where he directs the DAP-Lab and the Centre for Contemporary and Digital Performance. He is a choreographer and artistic director of AlienNation Co., a multimedia ensemble based in Houston (www.aliennationcompany.com). He has created numerous dancetheatre works, video installations, interactive works and site-specific performances in collaboration with artists in Europe, North America, Latin America, China and Japan. Author of several books, including Media and Performance: Along the Border (1998), Performance on the Edge: Transformations of Culture (2000), Performance, Technology & Science (2008), and Dance and Cognition (coeditor, 2005). He founded Interaktionslabor Göttelborn in Germany, and directs media and performance workshops all over the world, in Belo Horizonte, Istanbul, Beijing, Oslo, and at the EMPAC. › Interactivity: ‘user testing’ for participatory artworks, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.2, 147-. › Digital Cultures Lab, 2005, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 105-108. › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 83-. › Moveable worlds/Digital scenographies, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 89-107. Melissa Blanco Borelli University of Surrey, Department of Dance, Film and Theatre, Guildford, GU2 7XH, United Kingdom Keywords mulatta body, race, sexuality, Hollywood, film, racialized hips, movement, choreography, feminism Melissa Blanco Borelli is a lecturer in Dance and Film Studies at the University of Surrey. She has a Ph.D. in Dance History and Theory from UC Riverside, and was a Martin Luther King Jr. Visiting Scholar at MIT in the Department of Music and Theatre Arts. Currently, she works on her manuscript that examines mulatta corporeality and comparative social dance histories in Cuba and New Orleans. Her work appears in Dance Chronicle and Women & Performance: A Journal of Feminist Theory. › A taste of honey: choreographing mulatta in the Hollywood dance film, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 141153. Geoffrey Block University of Puget Sound, School of Music, 1500 N. Warner, Tacoma, WA, 98416, United States of America Keywords Jumbo, musicals of the 1930s, Rodgers and Hart, Billy Rose Professor Geoffrey Block earned a Ph.D. and an MA from Harvard University and a BA from UCLA. He was a Fulbright Fellow at the University of Bonn and has received a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship. Distinguished Professor of Music History at the University of Puget Sound, Tacoma, Washington, Block is the author of Ives: ‘Concord’ Sonata (Cambridge University Press, 1996), Enchanted Evenings: The Broadway Musical from Show Boat to Sondheim (Oxford University Press, 1997) and Richard Rodgers (Yale University Press, 2003), the inaugural volume of the Yale Broadway Masters series, for which he serves as general editor. › Revisiting the glorious and problematic legacy of the jazz age and depression musical, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 127-146. › Is life a cabaret? Cabaret and its sources in reality and the imagination, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.2, 163-180. Carola Boehm Manchester Metropolitan University Cheshire, Contemporary Arts, Crewe Green Road, Crewe, CW1 5DU, United Kingdom Keywords music technology, education, interdisciplinarity, higher education Carola Boehm holds degrees in musicology, computer science and electrical engineering. She is Acting Head of Department of Contemporary Arts at Manchester Metropolitan University. Lecturing and researching in the area of music and music technology since the early 90s, she has held previous positions at the University of Glasgow, the University of Mainz, the Conservatory of Music in Hannover, and the Royal Conservatory of Music in Den Haag. Since 1999 the CoDirector of the Centre for Music Technology at Glasgow University, she is also one of the founding members of n-ISM (Network for Interdisciplinary Studies in Science, Technology and Music). Her research areas include music technology education, methodologies for designing music systems, performance research and the interplay of interdisciplinarity, creativity and technology. › The discipline that never was: current developments in music technology in higher education in Britain, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 7-22. Yvon Bonenfant University of Winchester, Department of Performing Arts, Sparkford Rioad, Winchester, Hants, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords dance, somatics, pulsation, emotion, experience Yvon Bonenfant is a performance maker, researcher and interventionist who is currently a senior lecturer in Performing Arts at the University of Winchester. His performances and artworks have been realized in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, Japan, Portugal and France. Trained in analyse psychocorporelle, and a virtuosic extended vocalist, he is interested in new approaches to interdisciplinary performance making and activism after the end of post-modern platitudes. He is an overseas research associate of the Institut d’Esthétique des Arts et Technologies of the University of Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne. › Towards a politics of felt pulsation: De-disciplining voice and movement in the making of a musi-dance performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 39-58. › Textures and Translations: B(earth) in between Extended Voice and Visual Arts, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 237-256. › Enskinning between extended voice and movement: somatics, touch, contact and the camera, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 65-87. Marie Louise Bourbeau Master Sharing International inc, 45, de la Tourelle, Québec, Canada Keywords performance, spatial design, audience, image schemata, new media Marie Louise Bourbeau is a mezzo soprano soloist with an international career. She has expertise in the training of voice and breathing techniques. Ms Bourbeau now resides in Quebec City, where she is developing an artistic practice in inter-arts performance production and offers coaching in career development and production contexts. Dr. Geoffrey Edwards and Ms Bourbeau are partners in a company called Master Sharing International, formed to facilitate the collaboration between the arts and the sciences. › Image schemata - a guiding principle for multi-modal expression in performance design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 189-206. Chelcy Bowles University of Wisconsin-Madison, Division of Continuing Studies, 21 N. Park St., Room 7352, Madison, Wisconsin, 53715, United States of America Keywords Irish music, music education, historical harp Chelcy Bowles is Professor of Music and Director of Continuing Education in Music at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where she directs professional development programs for music teachers and performers, the community adult music education program, and the Madison Early Music Festival. She holds a Ph.D. in Music Education, and has taught music at the elementary, secondary, college, and continuing adult levels. Her work has been published in numerous professional journals and presented at major conferences. She is national chair of MENC’s Adult and Community Music Education Research Group and serves on the editorial boards of American String Teacher and International Journal of Community Music. Also a harpist, she edited and co-authored A Harp in the School: A Guide for School Ensemble Directors and Harpists (2006), and has special interests in historical harp and traditional Irish music. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 139-141. › New Initiatives, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 287-291. Elizabeth Boyce Independent Keywords audience, collaboration, failure, Simon Ellis, Colin Poole, Choreodrome Elizabeth Boyce is a writer and editor who first worked with words within contemporary art practice. She trained in Fine Art (Painting) at RMIT University, in Melbourne, her birth city. Over ten years she exhibited installations and works on paper that increasingly integrated text, until writing and editing became her primary practices. At the same time, she began writing for artists in disciplines including installation and dance. She has since worked in publishing, now lives in London, and still writes for artists and arts organizations. › My name is Colin, and this is Simon, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 65-78. Andy Brader Queensland University of Technology Creative Industries Faculty, K Block 410, Victoria Park Rd, Kelvin Grove, Brisbane, 4059, Australia Keywords education, youth, music, multimedia, technical support Andy Brader is a Research Fellow specializing in education, music and technology. He trained as a sociologist, music producer and youthwork practitioner in the United Kingdom. His research focuses on multi-media content created by and with disengaged youth. His teaching expertise focuses on the development of blended multi-media education projects. Brader possesses significant skills in managing projects and working collaboratively with stakeholders in low socioeconomic areas. As the founder of a non-profit recording facility in the United Kingdom he has a strong commitment to securing first-class multi-media education services for all young people. › Synchronous learner support for music-sequencing software, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 159-174. Erin Brannigan University of New South Wales, School of English, Media and Performing Arts, R.119, Level 1, Webster Building, Kensington, NSW, 2052, Australia Keywords dance, film, Deleuze, Balázs Dr. Erin Brannigan works in the fields of dance and film as an academic and curator. She is currently a lecturer in Dance at the University of NSW, Sydney, Australia. Erin was the founding Director of ReelDance International Dance on Screen Festival (since 1999) and has curated dance screen programmes and exhibitions for Sydney Festival 2008, Melbourne International Arts Festival 2003, Dancehouse in Melbourne, Performance Space in Sydney and international dance screen festivals. Her most reccent monograph, Dancefilm: Choreography and the Moving Image, was published by the Oxford University Press in 2011. › Micro-choreographies: the close-up in dancefilm, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 121-139. Thea Brejzek Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK), Institute for Design and Technology, Ausstellungstr 60, Zurich, CH-8031, Switzerland Keywords performance, ubiquity, social network, scenography, flash mob Professor Thea Brejzek (Ph.D.) is Program Director of the Doctorate Program Scenography, a collaboration between the Zurich University of the Arts (ZHdK) and the Institute for Theatre, Film and Media Studies at the University of Vienna, and Curator for Theory at the 2011 Prague Quadrennial of Performance Design and Space Informed by her dual backgrounds as opera and new music stage director and academic, Thea’s research addresses questions of virtuality and physicality on the mediated stage, intermediality and practice based research in scenography. She is the author of "Physicality and Virtuality: Memory, Space and Actor on the Mediated Stage" in: Alison Odey and Christine White (eds), The Potentials of Spaces: The Theory and Practice of Scenography and Performance, published in 2006 by Intellect, Bristol. › From social network to urban intervention: On the scenographies of flash mobs and urban swarms, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 109-122. MARY F. BREWER Department of English and Drama at Loughborough University Keywords Mary Brewer lectures in the Department of English and Drama at Loughborough University. She specializes in English and American drama from the late nineteenth century through contemporary performance. Her research interests focus on theatre and social identity, including gender, race, sexual, religious and national identities. › Offerings on the Altar of national pride: Pioneer plays and American identity, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 243-258. Larry Brewster University of San Francisco, School of Business and Professional Studies, 2130 Fulton St, San Francisco, CA 94117, United States of America Keywords music, politics, selfesteem, work ethic, race Larry Brewster served as dean of the College of Professional Studies at the University of San Francisco (1999-2007) and as acting dean of the School of Education (2002-2004). Before joining USF, he was academic dean at Menlo College, and has served as dean at Golden Gate University and professor of Political Science in the California State University system. Dr. Brewster regularly consults in public policy and organizational development and has industry experience as former Director of Market Research for BT Tymnet, an international data and telecommunications company. He recently co-authored California Politics, 2nd ed., Wadsworth & Co., 2004, and The Public Agenda: Issues in American Politics, 5th ed., Wadsworth & Co., 2004. He earned his doctorate at the University of Southern California and currently is Professor of Public Administration in the College of Professional Studies. › The California arts-in-corrections music programme: A qualitative study, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 33-46. Pauline Brooks Liverpool John Moores University, Dance Department, Faculty of Pauline Brooks is senior lecturer in Dance at Liverpool John Moores University. Her creative research includes collaboration with Professor Luke Kahlich of Temple University in Philadelphia, USA, involving dance and telematic performance, and with Professor Patrick Education, Community and Leisure, Barkhill Road, Liverpool, L17 6BD, United Kingdom Carmichael involving semantic technology with the ESRC/EPSRC Ensemble Project and the MIT-based SIMILE team. Her work has, to date, been presented at conferences on dance, technology and pedagogy in the United Kingdom, the United States of America and Malaysia. Before lecturing at LJMU, she performed with Nexus Dance Theatre (Scotland), Springs Dance Co. (England), Ann Vachon/Dance Conduit and Sybil Dance Co. (USA) She has choreographed and taught extensively in the United Kingdom and overseas, including posts at Temple and Clarion Universities in America, and at Aberdeen and Edinburgh Universities. Keywords spatial zones, telematic performance, live art, dance › Creating new spaces: Dancing in a telematic world, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 49-60. Helen Brooks University of Kent, School of Arts, Jarman building, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Keywords Drury Lane, theatre management, James Lacy, women's rights, Theophilus Cibber Helen's research interests and teaching specialisms are around Restoration and long eighteenth-century theatre and performance with a special emphasis on women's involvement of theatre of the period. She has published on eighteenth century actresses and theatre managers and is currently working on a monograph examining the complex relationship between the actress and concepts of gender over the eighteenth century. As a theatre historian Helen is also interested in the application of new technologies to research and teaching in the theatre history. In 2008-09 she led the development of the Integrated Performance and Learning Environment in Second Life, at University of Nottingham, with funding from the Nottingham E-Learning Team. › ‘Your sincere friend and humble servant’: Evidence of managerial aspirations in Susannah Cibber's letters, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 147159. Kevin Brown University of Missouri, Theatre, 129 Fine Arts Building, Columbia, MO 65211, United States of America Keywords performance, technology, liveness, presence, postmodern body, embodiment, chatterbots Dr. Kevin Brown is Assistant Professor of Theatre at the University of Missouri at Columbia. He has published numerous articles, including 'Auslander's Robot' and 'The Auslander Test: Or, "Of Bots and Humans"' in the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 'Spectacle as Resistance: Performing Tree Ordination in Thailand' in the Journal of Religion and Theatre, 'Dancing into the Heart of Darkness' in Puppetry International, 'Liveness Anxiety: Karaoke and the Performance of Class,' in Popular Entertainment Studies, and 'European Theatre and Performance' in the Encyclopedia of World Popular Culture. Previously, he was an Assistant Professor of Theatre and Cinema at Missouri Western State University, and he received his Ph.D. from the University of Colorado at Boulder. › Auslander’s robot, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 3-22. › The Auslander Test: or, ‘Of Bots and Humans’, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 181-188. Carol Brown University of Auckland, National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries, University of Auckland, 26 Symonds Street, Auckland, New Zealand Keywords performance installations, interactive performance, choreography Carol Brown is an award-winning choreographer, Artistic Director of Carol Brown Dances and currently a senior lecturer in Dance at Auckland University. Her work takes place at the intersection between movement, architecture and performance and includes solos, group works for theatre, performance installations and site-responsive events. Collaborative conversations across disciplines are core to her research as they impact on the ways we inhabit and activate space through performance. Current research is focused on choreography for urban environments (Urban Devas and Tongues of Stone) and interactive performance (Revolve). › Design, digital gestures and the in[ter]ference of meaning: Reframing technology's role within design and place through performative gesture, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 5-22. Andrew Brown Queensland University of Technology,, Faculty of Creative Industries, Victoria Park Rd, Kelvin Grove, QLD 4059, Australia Andrew Brown is Professor of Digital Arts at the Queensland Conservatorium of Music, Brisbane, Australia. He was formerly the Research Manager at the Australasian Cooperative Research Centre for Interaction Design. He is a musician, researcher and educator with expertise in technologies that support creativity, algorithmic music and art, and the philosophy of technology. Keywords engagement, generative, virtual, networking, ensemble › Communities of sound: Examining meaningful engagement with generative music making and virtual ensembles, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 357-374. Hugh Brown QUT Creative Industries Faculty, Musk Avenue, Kelvin Grove, Qld 4059, Australia Hugh Brown is a Ph.D. candidate in QUT’s Creative Industries Faculty. A lifelong semi-professional musician, he was editor of online politics and current affairs journal On Line Opinion (www.onlineopinion.com.au) before teaching communications at the University of Queensland and then commencing his Ph.D. study at QUT. Keywords internet, new media, online culture, Musowiki › Musowiki.net: notes on the creation of an online community music facility, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 277-290. Andrew R. Brown Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, Professor of Digital Arts, Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, South Bank campus, 140 Grey Street, Qld. 4101 Australia Keywords Andrew R. Brown is an educator, researcher, musician and author. He is Professor of Digital Arts at the Queensland Conservatorium in Brisbane, Australia. His academic expertise is in technologies that support creativity and learning, computational music and art, and the philosophy of technology. His creative activities focus on real-time audio-visual works using generative processes and live-coding performances. He is the author of Computers in Music Education: Amplifying Musicality, published by Routledge in New York. › eBILITY: from tool use to partnerships, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 201-215. Nick Bryan-Kinns Queen Mary - University of London, Department of Computer Science, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, United Kingdom Keywords interactivity, music, HCI, multimodal interaction Dr. Nick Bryan-Kinns is a senior lecturer in Graphical User Interface design at Queen Mary, University of London. His research focuses on exploring the nature of mutually engaging interaction, in particular, collaborative music interaction. Bryan-Kinns’ recent projects include EPSRC funded grants on exploring mutual engagement through the design of novel shared musical instruments, mobile music collaboration for teens, and novel tangible interaction. He was involved in two EPSRC funded networks focusing on the art-computer crossover and designing for the 21st century, chaired the ACM Creativity and Cognition conference 2010, has served on the NSF CreativeIT panel, and was co-chair of the BCS international conference on HCI in 2006 focusing on the theme of Engagement. In 1998 he was awarded a Ph.D. in Human Computer Interaction from the University of London. › The interior life of iPoi: Objects that entice witting transitions in performative behaviour, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 17-36. Hilary Bungay Canterbury Christ Church University, Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Hilary has been at Christ Church University since June 2003. She is a part-time senior lecturer in Medical Imaging and contributes to both radiography profession specific and the interprofessional modules. For two days a week Hilary is seconded to the Sidney De Haan Research Arts & Health, Mill Bay, Folkestone, CT20 1JG, United Kingdom Centre where she is currently involved in an evaluation of the Silver Song Club Project (Silver Song Clubs provide opportunities for older people to come together to make music and sing with the guidance of experienced musicians and volunteer support). She has recently been looking at ‘Arts on Prescription’ schemes around the country to investigate the feasibility of setting up a programme locally. Her particular research interests are cancer, older people, and health service evaluation. Keywords well-being, group singing, health, older people, ageing › The Silver Song Club Project: A sense of well-being through participatory singing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 165-178. Pamela Burnard University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, University of Cambridge 184 Hills Rd, Cambridge CB2 2PQ Keywords technology, music education, pedagogy, activity theory Pamela Burnard (BMus, DipEd, MMus, MEd, Ph.D.) works at the University of Cambridge, UK where she manages higher degree courses in arts, culture and education and in educational research. She is co-editor of the British Journal of Music Education, associate editor of the Psychology of Music and serves on numerous editorial boards. She is section editor of the 'Creativity Section' in the International Handbook of Research in Arts Education (Springer, 2007), and the 'Musical Creativity as Practice' section of the forthcoming Oxford Handbook of Music Education (OUP, 2010). She is convenor of British Education Research Association Creativity SIG. › Reframing creativity and technology: promoting pedagogic change in music education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 37-56. › Educational leadership, musical creativities and digital technology in education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 157-171. George Burrows University of Portsmouth, Creative Arts, Film and Media, Wiltshire Building Hampshire Terrace, Portsmouth, Hampshire, PO1 2ED, United Kingdom Keywords Claudio Monteverdi, Charles Mingus George is senior lecturer in Music, having joined the university in 2001. Previously, he lectured in Music for the Open University and Newcastle University where he also pursued postgraduate studies. His academic interests are wide ranging, encompassing the whole musical spectrum, from Claudio Monteverdi to Charles Mingus. His work brings new critical approaches to the study of music while also using music as a critical tool to explore other disciplines. Thus he is interested in psychoanalytical, sociological and philosophical understandings of interdisciplinary texts and practices involving music. George is also founding editor of Studies in Musical Theatre and cofounder of the international Song, Stage and Screen conference. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 121-122. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 3-6. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 225-226. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 125-126. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 209-215. › Books received, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 217-217. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 221-222. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 141-142. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 233-234. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 139-140. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 245-246. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 343-349. › EDITORIAL, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.2, 131-132. J. Bryan Burton West Chester University of Pennsylvania, School of Music, Swope Hall, 100 West Rosedale Avenue, West Chester, PA 193825428, United States of America Keywords Native Americans, culture, music education, United States J. Bryan Burton is currently the Professor and Chairperson of Music Education and Coordinator of Graduate Studies in Music at West Chester University of Pennsylvania. His interest in intercultural music education has taken him as both researcher and lecturer to over thirty states, Canada, Europe, Africa, Asia, Australia, South America and New Zealand. He is the author, co-author or contributing author of over forty books in the field of intercultural music education and music education. He is also noted for his work in research methodology and music education philosophy. Of mixed Native American and European descent, his long-standing interest in the music of the original inhabitants of North America has led him to meet and work with many musicians and tribal leaders and he has shared their social dances and songs with music teachers in over 200 workshops and presentations at state, national and international music education conferences. › Community of learning: Music learning and performance practices among the native peoples of North America, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 365-370. Tom Burvill Macquarie University, Department of Media, Music and Cultural Studies, Building Y3A, North Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia Associate Professor Tom Burvill is Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Media, Music and Cultural Studies at Macquarie University, Sydney, where he taught Australian Cultural Studies and Performance and Theatre Studies for over 30 years. Tom has published on Australian alternative and political theatre, on ethics and Keywords archiving, performance, documentation, digital media, ethics, theatre performance and on the production and reception of Chekhov in English-speaking cultures. He has had a long-term association with Sidetrack Performance Group in Marrickville, Sydney, as dramaturg and consultant and is currently writing the company's 30-year history. › Access to digitized performance documentation and the AusStage database, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 305-321. Jeffrey E. Bush Arizona State University, School of Music, P.O. Box 870405, Tempe, AZ 85287-0405, United States of America Keywords adult music making, music education, professional development Jeffrey E. Bush is the Associate Director for the School of Music at Arizona State University. His interests include adult music making, music education curriculum, and professional development for teachers. Jeff’s presentations have been featured at the International Society for Music Educators, the Music Educators National Conference In-Service Conference, the National Symposium for Music Instruction Technology, the National Orff-Schulwerk Association National Conference, the Greek Society for Music Education, and the International Music Education Research Symposium. His publication credits include contributions to Music Education, General Music Today, Journal of Technology in Music Education, Music Educators Journal, Ostinato, and Percussive Notes. Dr. Bush is currently a member of the editorial committee of General Music Today and is immediate past chair of the MENC Adult and Community Music Education Special Research Interest Group. › New Initiatives, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 287-291. Anthony Bushard University of Nebraska, School of Music, 1400 R Street, Lincoln, NE 68588, United States of America Keywords musical theatre, film score, theatre, 1950s, conformity Anthony Bushard is Assistant Professor of Music History at the University of Nebraska School of Music. Professor Bushard’s research interests are in Contemporary American music, specifically jazz, blues, and film music. His work has been featured in , the Journal of Film Music, Studies in Musical Theatre, the New Grove Dictionary of Jazz, Second Edition, and is forthcoming in On the Waterfront: A Film Score Guide, College Music Symposium, and the Journal of Music History Pedagogy. › From On the Waterfront to West Side Story, or There's Nowhere Like Somewhere, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 61-75. Matthew Bushell University of Northampton, School of the Arts, Park Campus, Boughton Green Road, Northampton, NN2 7AL, United Kingdom Matthew Bushell served three years in the British Army and has just completed a BA in Creative Writing at the University of Northampton. He has also been a director of a local arts organization, project manager for a local participatory arts project and a rehabilitation support worker for people with acquired brain injury. › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 223-231. Keywords creative writing, rehabilitation support Jennifer Cable University of Richmond, Booker Hall of Music, Richmond, Virginia, 23173, United States of America Keywords Henry Carey, Henry Purcell, Baroque Jennifer Cable earned her DMA and MM degrees from the Eastman School of Music in Rochester, NY, and her BM degree from Oberlin College. The study of eighteenth-century English song is the primary focus of her research work, with recent papers and lecture recitals presented on the cantatas of Johann Christoph Pepusch, the early eighteenth century English cantata, and the solo vocal music of Henry Carey. Her published essays examine Henry Carey’s treatment of political satire, and the development of the eighteenth century English cantata. Dr. Cable is an Associate Professor of Music at the University of Richmond, Richmond, Virginia, where she directs the Vocal Program and serves as the Director of the Richmond Scholars Program. › Gods! I can never this endure: madness made manifest in the songs of Henry Purcell (16591695) and Henry Carey (16891743), Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 15-26. Paul Cairns University of York, Department of Computer Science, Deramore Lane, Heslington, York, YO10 5GH, United Kingdom Paul Cairns is a Senior Lecturer in Human–Computer Interaction at the University of York. He has a strong interest in the diversity of research methods needed to study human-computer interaction. To this end, he has applied a wide mix of quantitative and qualitative methods to the understanding of the immersive experience of playing videogames. Keywords human-computer interaction, playing videogames › ‘Liveness’ in human-machine interaction, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 221-237. Patricia Shehan Campbell Patricia Shehan Campbell teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in Music Education, including music for children, world music pedagogy, sociology of music, and research methods. She was named University of Washington, School of Music, Seattle WA, 98195, United States of America Donald E. Petersen Professor of Music in 2000, and continues to hold this appointment. Her interests include music in early and middle childhood, world music pedagogy, and the use of movement as a pedagogical tool. Campbell is published widely on issues of crosscultural music learning, children’s musical development, music methods for children, and the study of world music in K-12 schools and university courses. She serves on the board of Smithsonian Folkways, and on the editorial committee of the British journal, Psychology of Music. Her most recent work includes Musician and Teacher: Orientation to Music Education (2008) and Tunes and Grooves (2008). Keywords The Revels, community music, music education, participation, traditional music, culture › John Langstaff: community musician and reveler, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 157-167. › Music Alive! In the Yakima Valley, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 303-307. Cristina Cano Vara Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain, Filología Inglesa, Spain Keywords Beckett, Stage plays, Paratextuality, Marisa Paredes, Alvaro del Amo, interpretation Cristina Cano Vara recently completed a Ph.D. thesis on Beckett at the Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, Spain. Her thesis explored Beckett's 'performance poetics' analysed through the study of the author's Epitexts and the scope of his authorial influence on the Spanish Theatre of the twenty-first century. She has mostly published on Beckett and Maria Irene Fornes, and is especially interested in cultural translation for the stage. › Beckett’s Not I vs. del Amo’s Yo no :some notes on cultural translation, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 23-32. Tom Cantrell Tom Cantrell is lecturer in drama in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television at the University of York. University of York, Department of Theatre, Film and Television, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD, United Kingdom › Playing for real in Max Stafford-Clark's Talking to Terrorists, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.2, 167-180. Keywords drama, terrorists, theatre and performance Michael Carklin University of Glamorgan, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Atrium, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2FN, United Kingdom Based at the University of Glamorgan, Michael Carklin is Head of Academic Programmes. His previous work includes co-directing King Oedipus, where Rob Smith was Musical Director. › Audience journeys through multiple stories: Adapting King Oedipus for performance, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 69-92. Keywords space and place, lived geographies, cinema, South Africa, childhood Paul Carr University of Glamorgan, Department of Arts and Media, Pontypridd, Rhondda, CF37 1DL, United Kingdom Keywords Frank Zappa, music, theatre, narrative, composition With over twenty years experience in both the music industry and academia, Paul Carr has acquired a wide range of research and professional interests. Originally studying Commercial Music at graduate diploma level at Newcastle College in the early 1980s, he subsequently obtained his BA(hons) from Middlesex University, followed by a Ph.D. under the supervision of Gavin Bryars. Prior to his current position of Head of the Music Academy at Glamorgan University, he was head of Popular Music at Bournemouth and Poole College for nine years. As a musician he has performed and recorded with some of the most well respected musicians on the international music scene, including 'The James Taylor Quartet' and Bob Berg. He is currently working on an edited book on Frank Zappa in addition to an ESF research project on widening participation in the music industry. › Frank Zappa and musical theatre:ugly ugly o’phan Annie and really deep, intense, thought-provoking Broadway symbolism, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 41-56. Rachel Carroll University of Teesside, School of Arts and Media, Middlesbrough, TS1 3BA, United Kingdom Keywords television, Charles Dickens, Bleak House, illegitimacy, neo-Victorian Dr. Rachel Carroll is Principal Lecturer in English at the University of Teesside. She has published widely on representations of gender and sexuality in twentieth century and contemporary fiction, including neoVictorian fiction. She is the editor of Adaptation in Contemporary Culture: Textual Infidelities (Continuum, 2009). Dr. Carroll’s principal research and publication interests are in gender and sexuality studies, especially feminist theory but more recently queer theory and also masculinity studies. She has published a book, Rereading Heterosexuality: Feminism, Queer Theory and Contemporary Fiction and Film (Edinburgh University Press). Recent publication topics include spinsterhood and heterosexuality in Sarah Waters’ fiction, representations of human cloning in Kazuo Ishiguro’s fiction and depictions of illegitimacy in the 2005 BBC television adaptation of Dickens’s Bleak House. › Queer beauty: illness, illegitimacy and visibility in Dickens's Bleak House and its 2005 BBC adaptation, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 5-18. Deborah Cartmell De Montfort University, Clephan Building, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords adaptation, genre, Jane Austen, Pride and Prejudice, romantic comedy, biography Dr. Deborah Cartmell is a reader in English, the director of the Centre for Adaptations and the head of Taught Postgraduate Programmes at De Montfort University. She is co-editor of Shakespeare (Routledge) and Adaptation (Oxford University Press) and the Founder and trustee of the Association of Adaptation Studies. Her most recent publication is Screen Adaptation: Impure Cinema (Palgrave, 2010) with Imelda Whelehan, and she has edited a volume, A Companion to Literature, Film and Adaptation (Blackwell). › Pride and Prejudice and the adaptation genre, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 227-243. Sheelagh Chadwick Brandon University, School of Music, 18th St, MB, Brandon, MB, R7A 6A9, Canada Keywords pedagogy, community, song, chorus, race, culture, African American music Sheelagh Chadwick is an Assistant Professor of Music Education at Brandon University in Manitoba, Canada. She teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in music education and community music, and also supervises student teachers. She taught Music Education in Botswana for six years while also working on National committees developing assessment procedures for both junior and senior secondary music programmes, and curriculum for the secondary music teacher diploma. She has participated in conferences in Kenya, the United States, the United Kingdom, Canada and China. Her research interests include teachers as agents of curriculum, formal and informal teaching and learning of indigenous African music, teacher education in Africa, and community music. › Lift every voice and sing: Constructing community through culturally relevant pedagogy in the University of Illinois Black Chorus, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 147-162. Karen Cham Digital Media Institute, Faculty of Art, Design & Architecture, Kingston Karen Cham is an artist, lecturer and researcher. She is Principal Lecturer in Digital Media and Development Director of the Digital Media Institute at Kingston University, UK. She has been working with audio-visual technology since 1987, making performance, installation University, Knights Park, Grange Road, Kingston, KT1 2TQ, United Kingdom and screen-based works. She explores the poetic potential of media technologies within a critical context. Current research interests include digital semiotics, computational media aesthetics and design for interaction. Keywords digital media, interactive art, reflexive practice, poststructuralism, complexity theory › Reconstruction theory: Designing the space of possibility in complex media, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 253268. Franc Chamberlain University College Cork, Drama & Theatre Studies, College Road, Cork, Co. Cork, Ireland Keywords Performance Studies, theatre, hegemony, interdisciplinarity Franc Chamberlain was the course leader for Performance Studies at The University of Northampton. He was responsible for the development of this course, which was the first undergraduate Performance Studies degree in the United Kingdom. Franc Chamberlain currently teaches the practice and theory of theatre at undergraduate and post-graduate level at University College Cork, and has a particular interest in devising and the development of the actor /performer as a creative artist. He is the author of Michael Chekhov (Routledge, 2002); more recent publications include contributions to Sacred Theatre (ed. Yarrow, Intellect 2007) and Physical Theatres: A Critical Reader (ed. Keefe & Murray, Routledge, 2007). › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 179-188. › Interrogating boundaries/respecting differences? The role of theatre within Performance Studies, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 263-. David Chandler Doshisha University, KarasumaHigashi-iru, Fusokan bld, Imadegawa-dori, Kamigyo-ku,, Kyoto, 602-8580, Japan David Chandler is an Associate Professor in English Literature at Doshisha University, Kyoto. His research interests include provincial writing in late eighteenth century England, especially that of Norwich, and also the works of Charles Dickens. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 343-349. Keywords Shakespeare, Charles Dickens, literary study Freda Chapple Chapple's Voice Coaching, shover Freda Chapple was the Programme Director of the Literature and Creative Media programme for The Institute for Lifelong Learning at the University of Sheffield and the founder co-convener of the Parish Hall Events Centre,Own company Intermediality in Theatre and Performance Research Group of the International Federation for Theatre Research, with Chiel Kattenbelt. Keywords voice, theatre, business, community › Adaptation as Education: A Lady Macbeth of the Mtsensk District, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 17-32. Helen J. Chatterjee University College London, Room G17, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom Helen Chatterjee is Deputy Director of Museums and Collections and Senior Lecturer in Biological Sciences at University College London. Her research interests include touch and the value of object handling in health and wellbeing, and its pedagogical function in education. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords education, object handling, touch Brigid Cherry St Mary’s University College, Culture and Creative Arts, Waldegrave Road,Twickenham, Middlesex, TW1 1LA, United Kingdom Keywords horror, cult, fan culture, Gothic aesthetic Brigid Cherry is a senior lecturer in Communication, Culture and Creative Arts at St Mary’s University College, Twickenham, UK, where she teaches modules on horror cinema, cult film and television, youth culture and film aesthetics. Her research has focussed on horror and science fiction fandoms, particularly the female horror film audience, and online science fiction fan cultures. She has recently published work on fan responses to the return of Doctor Who, the feminine aesthetic of horror cinema, cultural borrowings in alternative music video and fan canons. Her Film Guidebook on Horror was published by Routledge in 2009. She is currently working on a monograph on trans-media storytelling in and is editing a collection on True Blood for I.B. Tauris’s Cult Television series. Her current research projects include feminine handicrafts as forms of femaleDoctor Who › Negotiating the Punk in Steampunk: Subculture, Fashion & Performative Identity, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 5-25. Kennedy C. Chinyowa University of the Witwatersrand, Wits School of the Arts, Private Bag 3, Kennedy C. Chinyowa is a lecturer and research fellow in Dramatic Arts at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. He has taught at several universities including the University of Zimbabwe, Griffith University (Australia), University of KwaZulu- Wits, Johannesburg, 2050, South Africa Natal and Tshwane University of Technology (South Africa). He was a visiting scholar in the Centre for Applied Theatre Research at Griffith University where he obtained his Ph.D. degree in Theatre for Development. Apart from winning numerous research awards and presenting several conference papers and workshops, he has published widely in books and international refereed journals such as Research in Drama Education (UK), Studies in Theatre and Performance (UK), Drama Australia (Nadie) Journal and the South African Theatre Journal. Keywords make-believe, metacommunication, paradox, repetition, imitation › More Than Mere Story-Telling: the pedagogical significance of African ritual theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.2, 87-96. › The Sarungano and Shona Storytelling: an African Theatrical Paradigm, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.1, 18-30. › Frames of metacommunication in African theatre for development, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 13-24. › By whom and for whom? An aesthetic appraisal of selected African popular theatre workshops, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 5-22. › Theatrical performance as technology: the case of drama in AIDS education (DramAidE) in South Africa, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 3352. › Playing against violence: a case study of popular theatre in Zimbabwe, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 275-287. Sylvia Chong National Institute of Education, Singapore, 1 Nanyang Walk, 637616, Singapore Keywords community music, education Dr. Sylvia Chong is currently the Deputy Head, Office of Academic Quality Management, National Institute of Education (NIE), Singapore. She is concurrently an Associate Professor of Visual and Performing Arts at NIE. Her current research interests focus on the role of community music on education as well as teacher quality and effectiveness. › Music links A music ensemble outreach programme for schools, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 39-46. Eddy K. M. Chong Nanyang Technological University, Visual & Performing Arts, 50 Nanyang Avenue, 639798, Singapore Keywords straddle tonal studies, traditional music, music education, Eddy Chong is an Associate Professor at the National Institute of Education, Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. He teaches music theory and analysis across diploma, undergraduate and graduate levels. His research interests straddle tonal studies and twentiethcentury music. Beyond his initial doctoral work on developing a neoSchenker approach to analysing Ravel, he has since broadened his music-analytical purview to examine the music of Lutosławski, educational technology Hindemith and Persichetti in some detail. He has also been exploring the musical systems of Chinese, Indonesian and Japanese traditional music so as to better understand some of the musical fusions in more recent works. He has presented at various international conferences, and has published in journals and book chapters. › Blogging transformingmusic learning andteaching: Reflections ofa teacherresearcher, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 167-181. Broderick D. V. Chow Institute for Performing Arts Development, University of East London, Office EB 1.14, Docklands Campus, University Way, London, E16 2RD Keywords political philosophy, stand-up comedy, contemporary readings Dr. Broderick D. V. Chow is a lecturer in Theatre Studies at the Institute of Performing Arts Development, University of East London. His research centres on contemporary readings of political philosophy, and performance as ideological critique. His practice-as-research Ph.D. thesis ‘How to do things with jokes’ was the first Ph.D. to be awarded by Central School of Speech & Drama, University of London. His practice includes solo performance, stand-up comedy, devising and installation. Broderick has a BA in Theatre and English from the University of British Columbia, and an MA from the Central School of Speech & Drama. › Parkour and the critique of ideology: Turn-vaulting the fortresses of the city, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 143-154. Paul Christman Keywords Rodgers and Hart, Broadway, theatre, music, Hans Spialek, Hugh Martin Paul Christman holds the Weitzenhoffer Professorship in Musical Theatre at the University of Oklahoma where he has served on the faculty since 1999. He received a Master of Music in Performance from Arizona State University and a Dual Bachelor of Arts in Theatre and Music from Wright State University (OH). With Music Theatre of Wichita, he has been musical director/conductor for twenty-four productions since 1994. He has guest taught at the Stage School in Hamburg, Germany and the Danish Academy of Musical Theatre; lectured at the Music in Gotham American Musical Theater Conference (N.Y.C.), the Song, Stage & Screen Conference (U.K.), the Musical Theatre Educators Alliance Conference (N.Y.C.) and Putting It Together: Teaching Musical Theatre in U.K. Higher Education (U.K.) and written for the National Association of Teachers of Singing Journal and Studies in Musical Theatre Journal. › Pal Joey: reconstructing a Classic Rodgers and Hart Score, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 171-183. Necla Çikigil Middle East Technical University, Department of Modern Languages. Department of Music and Fine Arts, Bogaz Sokak 15/2, Gazi Osman Pasa, Ankara, 6700, Turkey Keywords dialogue, Coranto, Galliard, la volta, pavane, ballet, historical dances, Shakespeare, effective presentations, performance Dr. Necla Çikigil, an instructor of English and History of Theatre at the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, received her MA in Shakespeare Studies at the Shakespeare Institute, Birmingham University. Because of her combined interest in theatre and ballet (being a graduate of Beatrice Appleyard’s Ballet School in Ankara), she received her Ph.D. for an analysis of Romeo and Juliet as ballet in the Theatre Department at Ankara University. Her major publications are on literary works translated into ballet, danced versions of Shakespeare’s works and reviews of Shakespeare productions. › Renaissance dance patterns in Shakespeare's Italian plays: An analysis of dialogues, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 263-272. Roger Clegg De Montfort University, Performance and Digital Arts, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, dance, Richard Tarlton, carnival, Will Kemp, Samuel Foote Roger Clegg is a lecturer in Drama at De Montfort University where he delivers a module on Popular Theatre and twentieth century performance. He completed his Ph.D. at the University of Exeter, where Peter Thomson was his supervisor, in 2005. Roger’s current research interests include popular theatre and the popular tradition in theatre and performance, including: the clown and fool figure; carnival, the carnivalesque and subversive performance; and popular performance on the early modern English stage. He is currently editing a collection of stage jigs from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. › ‘He’s for a jig or a tale of bawdry—’: notes on the English dramatic jig, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 67-83. Stephen Clift Canterbury Christ Church University, Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts & Health, University Centre Folkestone, Mill Bay, Folkestone, CT20 1JG, United Kingdom Keywords older people, health, group singing, Stephen Clift is Professor of Health Education within the department of Health, Wellbeing and the Family at Canterbury Christ Church University. He has made contributions to health education and promotion in the fields of HIV/AIDS and sex education for young people, international travel and tourism, and evaluation of the Health Promoting School. His current interests are focused on the contributions of the arts and music to healthcare and health promotion. Together with Grenville Hancox, Professor of Music at Christ Church University, he has recently established the Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts and Health. › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. › The Silver Song Club Project: A sense of well-being through participatory singing, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 165-178. John M. Clum Duke University, Theater Studies, 109 Page Auditorium, Campus Box 90680, United States of America Keywords homosexuality, Tennessee Williams, theatre, operatic productions John Clum (Ph.D., Princeton) is the author of a number of books including Still Acting Gay: Male Homosexuality in Modern Drama (2001), Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture (2000), and "He’s All Man": Learning Masculinity, Gayness, and Love from American Movies (2002), and essays on Tennessee Williams, Sam Shepard, and Larry Kramer. He has also edited two major anthologies of contemporary drama. Professor Clum’s own plays have been produced in theaters around America and seven of his plays have been published. He has also directed over sixty professional and university theatrical and operatic productions. He has twice won Duke’s Distinguished Teaching Award. › REVIEWS, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 117-123. Jane Coad The University of the West of England, The Centre for Child and Adolescent Health, Frenchay Campus, Coldharbour Lane, Bristol, United Kingdom Keywords health, social care, genetic information, photography, young people Jane Coad is a Senior Research Fellow (Post Doctoral) in The Centre for Child and Adolescent Health, The University of the West of England and Honorary Senior Research Fellow in a DH funded project known as FamilyTalk; (Communicating Genetic Information across Families) at The University of Birmingham. Jane undertakes participatory research with children and young people in a variety of health and social care settings using a range of qualitative research methods both locally in Bristol and Birmingham but also nationally. Her current research projects include engaging children and families in research around communicating genetic information; using photography to explore young people’s perceptions of health and lives, memories of paediatric intensive care unit and the effects of early arts on young children’s health and development. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Claire Cochrane University of Worcester, Henwick Grove, Worcester, WR2 6AJ, United Claire Cochrane is a senior lecturer in Drama at University College Worcester. She is the author of two books on the Birmingham Repertory Theatre: Shakespeare and the Birmingham Repertory Theatre 1913-1929 and Birmingham Rep: A City’s Theatre 1962-2002 Kingdom and is currently working on a book on twentieth century British theatre practice for Cambridge University Press which focuses on regional theatre and the relationship with London. She also writes on the development of contemporary Black British and British Asian theatre. Keywords British theatre, regional theatre, British Asian theatre, Black British theatre › It stands for more than theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.3, 188-. Katye Coe Coventry University, c/o Summer Dancing, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords Summer Dancing, dance, art Katye Coe is a dance artist and senior lecturer whose primary dance practices are Skinner Releasing Technique, Contact Improvisation and Non stylised movement (Helen Poynor). She has collaborated with Joe Moran (Dance Art Foundation) on his new work, Open to Change, and toured her solo, Behind my Back, in London and Essex Spring 2010. Katye is the artistic director of Summer Dancing, an international festival of dance and performance. › Artist-led, artist-used: experiences at Coventry's Summer Dancing 2009, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 199-214. Don D. Coffman University of Iowa, Frost School of Music, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL 33134, Iowa, PO Box 248204, United States of America Keywords lifelong learning, adult education, gerontology, instrumental music education Don D. Coffman, Professor of Music Education, chairs the Department of Music Education and Music Therapy at the University of Miami’s Frost School of Music and is Professor Emeritus of Music Education at The University of Iowa. . He has served on the Executive Committee of the Society for Research in Music Education and chaired the Adult and Community Music Education Special Research Interest Group of MENC: The National Association for Music Education and the Community Music Activity Commission of the International Society for Music Education. He currently serves on the editorial boards of the Journal of Research in Music Education and the International Journal of Community Music. His passion is making music with ‘chronologically gifted’ adults in wind bands. In 2006 he was honoured for his work with his New Horizons Band with two awards for State Outreach and Public engagement and the State of Iowa Governor’s › Survey of New Horizons International Music Association musicians, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 375-390. › Learning from our elders: survey of New Horizons International Music Association band and orchestra directors, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 227-240. › ‘And they lived happily ever after’: Community music and higher education?, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 97-104. Mary L. Cohen University of Iowa, Music Education Department, Iowa City, IA 522421795, United States of America Keywords prison,community, social justice, Elvera Voth, prison choir Mary Cohen, Ph.D., Assistant Professor of Music Education, holds a joint appointment with the School of Music and the College of Education at the University of Iowa. She earned her BME, MME and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Kansas and has ten years of experience teaching general music in schools in Kansas. At Iowa, she teaches undergraduate choral methods, elementary methods and graduate courses. Dr. Cohen combines research and teaching in her work with two community choirs. Her research is published in the International Journal of Research in Choral Singing, Australian Journal of Music Education, Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, Journal of Correctional Education, International Journal of Community Music and Choral Journal. › Conductors' perspectives of Kansas prison choirs, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 319-333. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 3-6. › Risk taker extraordinaire: An interview with Elvera Voth, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 151-156. Stefanie Cohen Keywords dance, somatics, living body Stefanie Cohen, Registered Somatic Movement Educator, International Somatic Movement Education and Therapy Association (ISMETA), is an independent dance/movement artist and somatic practitioner, teaching and performing throughout the United States. She completed the Contemplative Dance Year-Long programme in Authentic Movement, in 1998. Currently, she is working towards completing her MA in Dance and Somatic Well-Being:Connections to the Living Body – an approved programme of ISMETA – from the University of Central Lancashire (US branch at Moving Body Resources, New York City). She is also the owner and manager of SOMA: Studio Of Movement Arts, in Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States. › Sightless touch and touching witnessing: Interplays of Authentic Movement and Contact Improvisation, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 103112. Sara Cohen University of Liverpool, School of Music, 80-82 Bedford Street South, Liverpool, Liverpool, L69 7WW, Sara Cohen is a Professor in the School of Music and Director of the Institute of Popular Music. She has a DPhil in Social Anthropology from Oxford University and specializes in ethnographic approaches to music research, and in research on music and urban geography. United Kingdom › ‘A fanzine of record’: Merseysound and mapping Liverpool’s Post Punk popular musicscapes, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 87-104. Keywords ethnographic approaches to music research, urban geography Bruce Cole The University of York, Department of Music, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD Keywords disability arts, prison education, community music Bruce Cole is Fellow in Community Music at the University of York, where he is responsible for undergraduate and postgraduate programmes (including the United Kingdom’s first M.A. in Community Music) and developing outreach work with the education departments of orchestras and disability arts and prison education programmes. He has also been external examiner and consultant in community music to institutions in the United Kingdom, Ireland, Japan and Africa. Before joining the University of York in 1986, he founded and ran the Lewisham Academy of Music, a resource centre for young people in southeast London. A composer who has worked in the music industry, concert hall, theatre and film, he has held two residencies in London schools and authored and co-authored six books on school music. He is also Chief Examiner in Music and Music Technology to the London examinations board Edexcel. › Community music and higher education: A marriage of convenience, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 79-89. › Reflections on community music and higher education, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 91-95. Dave Collins University Centre Doncaster, University Centre, Doncaster, South Yorkshire DN5 7SZ, Doncaster, UK Keywords classical guitar, protocol analysis, phenomenology, cognition Dave Collins is Deputy Director of Higher Education at University Centre, Doncaster. He is the founder and editor of the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, now in its seventh year, and the founder of the Journal of Music, Technology and Education. His primary interest is in the area of creative cognition and music composition and the search for appropriate modes of enquiry. › Introduction, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 3-4. › Problem-solving strategies and processes in musical composition: Observations in real time, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 47-76. › 'Getting there': Do we need to study how people compose music?, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 173-179. Jane Collins Keywords Africa, Victorian, colonial, costume, audience, performance, scenography Jane Collins is Reader in Theatre at the Wimbledon College of Art. She is a writer and director whose extensive links with African theatre include the co-direction in Kampala (Uganda) of Maama Nalukela Ne’zzadde Lye (1995), a version of Mother Courage which was the first official African translation of a play by Brecht. With Michael Pavelka, she is joint-curator of the exhibition ‘Stages Calling’ at the Royal National Theatre (March 2007). The exhibition marks thirty years of the history of the Market Theatre in Johannesburg. › ‘Umuntu, Ngumuntu, Ngabantu’: The story of the African choir, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 95-114. Lisa Colton University of Huddersfield, Department of Music, Queensgate, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, HD1 3DH, United Kingdom Keywords medieval music, gender and identity, plainsong Dr. Lisa Colton is Subject Leader for Music at the University of Huddersfield, where she is also the Director of the Centre for the Study of Music, Gender and Identity (MuGI). She has published a critical edition of the York Masses, as well as journal articles in Music and Letters, Journal of the Royal Musical Association and Plainsong and Medieval Music and Contemporary Music Review. She is Chair of the Plainsong and Medieval Music Society. › Book Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 309-324. Claire Conceison Duke University, Durham, NC 27708, United States of America Keywords contemporary theatre, intercultural performance, Gao Xingjian, Meng Jinghui Claire Conceison joined Duke University from Tufts University in 2009. She taught two courses in Autumn 2010 ('Sport as Performance' and 'China: Theatre and Society') and two courses in Spring 2011 ('Sport as Performance' and 'The China Theatre Experiment,' a contemporary Chinese theatre workshop resulting in a production). Her research interests include contemporary theatre practice in mainland China, intercultural performance, translation and cultural transmission, and Asian American cultural production. Her scholarly projects in progress include a comprehensive history of Chinese spoken drama, a study of the French-language plays of Gao Xingjian, an anthology of plays of Meng Jinghui, and an edited volume on sport as performance. › Face Time – Time to Face Realities of Cultural Production in the American University, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.2, 96-108. WILLIAM CONDEE Keywords William F. Condee (J. Richard Hamilton/Baker and Hostetler Professor of Humanities and Professor of Theater, Ohio University) is the author of two books, Coal and Culture: The Opera House in Appalachia (Ohio University Press, 2005) and Theatrical Space: A Guide for Directors and Designers (Scarecrow Press,1995), as well as ‘Experiments with architectural space in the German theatre’, in A History of German Theatre (Cambridge University Press, 2008) and ‘Architecture for the twentieth century: Imagining the theatre in the 1920s’, in Experimenters, Rebels, and Disparate Voices: The Theatre of the 1920s Celebrates American Diversity (Greenwood, 2003). His articles on theatre space have appeared in the Journal of American Drama & Theatre, Architectural Review, World Architecture, the Journal of American Culture Scenography International, Theatre Design and Technology and Themes in Drama. Articles on other subjects have appeared in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Theatre and Performance, Theatre Survey, Theatre Annual, Western › Three bodies, one soul: Tradition and Burmese puppetry, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 259-274. Rob Conkie La Trobe University, Department of Theatre & Drama, Victoria, 3086, Australia Dr. Rob Conkie is a lecturer in Theatre & Drama at La Trobe University in Melbourne, Australia. He earned his doctorate from the University of Southampton. His teaching and research focuses on practical and theoretical approaches to Shakespeare in performance. › Democratizing Shakespeare, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.3, 179190. Keywords carnival, commedia dell’arte, Bell Shakespeare Company, popular tradition, Bakhtin Roy Connolly University of Sunderland, Drama Department, Priestman Building, Green Terrace, Sunderland, Tyne and Wear, SR2 7EE, United Kingdom Keywords embodiment, psychology, emotion, memory Roy Connolly is a senior lecturer in Drama, and Programme Leader for the MA in Contemporary Performance Practice at the University of Sunderland. His research interests include Irish theatre, acting and psychology and directing. He has presented papers at national and international conferences and has published articles in the Irish Studies Review, Studies in Theatre and Performance, and the Journal of Theatre History Studies. He has also contributed chapters to the series the Dictionary of Literary Biography and is author of Fighting the Waves: The Evolution of Lyric Players Theatre (2000). › The Laws of Normal Organic Life or Stanislavski Explained: Towards a scientific account of the subconscious in Stanislavski's system, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 237-260. › Embodying interpretation, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 43-58. › Brecht and the disembodied actor, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 91-110. › Something real is needed: Constructing and dismantling presence, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 203-218. Costas Constandinides University of Nicosia, Communications, 46 Makedonitissas Ave, P.O. Box 24005, Nicosia, 1700, Cyprus Keywords intertextuality, digital media, realism, doppelgänger Dr. Costas Constandinides is a lecturer in the Department of Communications at the University of Nicosia, Cyprus. He has taught in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading, UK, where he was also awarded his Ph.D. He is a member of the Film Selection Committee of Cyprus Film Days International film festival and a member of the Script Evaluation Subcommittee of the Cinema Advisory Committee of Cyprus. He is the author of the book From Film Adaptation to Post–celluloid Adaptation: Rethinking the Transition of Popular Narratives and Characters across Old and New Media (New York/London: Continuum, 2010). His research interests mainly focus on film adaptation, post-celluloid adaptation, digital cinema and transnational horror cinema. › Adapting the Literature of the Double: manifestations of cinematic forms in Fight Club and Enduring Love, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 95-107. Grayson Cooke Southern Cross University, School of Arts and Social Sciences, Southern Cross University, Military Road, East Lismore, NSW 2480, Australia Keywords cinema, technology, new media, multimedia, performance, live art Grayson Cooke is an interdisciplinary scholar and media artist, Senior Lecturer in the School of Arts and Social Sciences at Southern Cross University, and Course Coordinator of the Bachelor of Media degree. Grayson has performed live audio-visual works in Australia, New Zealand, Italy and the United Kingdom. He has exhibited works of new media and photography in Australia and Canada and he has published academic articles in numerous print and online journals. He is also an associate editor for the online cultural theory journal Transformations. He holds an interdisciplinary Ph.D. from Concordia University in Montreal. › Startmaking sense: Live audio-visual media performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 193-208. Steve Cooper University of Wolverhampton, Wulfruna Street, Wolverhampton, WV1 1LY, United Kingdom Keywords podcasting, assessment feedback, iPod, independent learning, improving practice Steve is a senior lecturer in Popular Music at the University of Wolverhampton and is a key member of the university’s Podagogy research team. He is currently evaluating how a range of iPod related technologies support the student learning experience. Steve is a regular podcast contributor and releases regular episodes for students studying Songwriting & Performance at the University of Wolverhampton. He holds a first class honours degree in Music and Popular Music, a MA in Higher Education teaching, a Licentiate Diploma in guitar from the London College of Music and is a teaching fellow of the Higher Education Academy. Steve is also a well-established guitarist who has performed and recorded throughout the UK & Europe for more than fifteen years. › Delivering student feedback in higher education: the role of podcasting, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 153-165. Elizabeth Titrington Craft Keywords Rent, Jonathan Larson, musical theatre, national identity Elizabeth Titrington Craft is a Ph.D. candidate in Historical Musicology at Harvard University. She earned bachelor’s degrees in Music and Sociology from the College of William and Mary and a MA from the University of Maryland at College Park. Her master’s thesis examined the creation of by Jonathan Larson. She is currently coauthoring an article about an exhibit she co-curated on ‘Nadia Boulanger and Her American Composition Students’, forthcoming in the proceedings of the Crosscurrents conference on American and European Music in Interaction, 1900–2000. She is also at work on a dissertation examining ethnicity and national identity in American musical theatre through narratives of Americanization. › ‘Is this what it takes just to make it to Broadway?!’: Marketing In the Heights in the twenty-first century, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 49-69. Jennifer-Lynn Crawford Jennifer-Lynn Crawford is currently on faculty at Northern School of Northern School of Contemporary Dance, 98 Chapeltown Road, Leeds, LS7 4BH, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary dance, release-based technique Contemporary Dance where she lectures in release-based technique. She also teaches on a freelance basis throughout the UK, Germany and Scandinavia. Jennifer-Lynn currently situates her research interests within ‘The Nature of Things’, a project with long-term collaborator and choreographer Charlotte Spencer. › Reflections on Skin, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 177-187. Brian Crow University of Birmingham, Drama Department, P.O.Box 363, Birmingham, West Midlands, B15 2TT, United Kingdom Keywords drama, Sikhism, theatre, management, arts Brian Crow is a senior lecturer in Drama and Theatre Arts and Director of Postgraduate Studies at the University of Birmingham. He has previously taught in universities in Nigeria and Australia. He has directed some twenty productions in university theatres in Nigeria and Australia, as well as at Birmingham. In Nigeria he directed several productions of plays by Brecht adapted and translated for Nigerian audiences, as well as David Hare’s Fanshen and Beckett’s Waiting for Godot, while in Australia his productions included his own play, Something Better (1988) about a group of Australian socialists who established a utopian settlement in Paraguay in the 1890s. At Birmingham his most recent credits include Louis Nowra’s Australian play, The Golden Age (2003). › The Behzti affair revisited: British multiculturalism, audiences and strategy, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 211-222. Ben Curry Cardiff University Keywords Le nozze di Figaro, Mozart, semiotics, opera, music Ben Curry is a Ph.D. student at Cardiff University researching the application of semiotics to music. He holds a BMus. from Cardiff University and an MA from the University of Bristol. He has taught students at Cardiff, Bristol and Bath Spa Universities and has given research papers on musical semiotics at conferences in Bristol, Cardiff, Liverpool, Surrey and Vilnius. › Musical semiotics in action: applying and debating Hatten's semiotics in a musico-dramatic context, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 53-65. Brian Curson al'Kamie Intermedia Theatre, c/o Blue Cottage Keywords digital scenography, dance, virtual environment, complexity theory, emergence Brian Curson studied science and engineering, and worked as a software analyst and engineer before switching to study martial arts and then dance at the Rambert School of Dance. He has worked internationally as an independent dance artist since 1996 collaborating with film-makers, sculptors, and composers, while simultaneously developing an interest in and working as a lighting designer. Mr Curson formed al’Ka-mie with Dr. Stuart in 2000 and not only dances and choreographs, but he is also responsible for the design and development of the computer systems and lighting used. › Exploring Living Room: The dancing body and live immersion in digital scenography, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 259-274. Dennis Cutchins Brigham Young University, Department of English, Office 4167 JFSB, Provo, UTAH, 84602, United States of America Dennis Cutchins has taught at BYU since 1997. He earned a Ph.D. in American literature, specializing in contemporary Native American novels, from the Florida State University in 1997. Dr. Cutchins has written several articles on Native American authors Leslie Marmon Silko and Louise Erdrich. He teaches American literature, with specializations in Native American literature and film and literature. Keywords American literature, Native American literature › ADAPTATION: THE JOURNAL OF LITERATURE ON SCREEN STUDIES, DEBORAH CARTMELL, TIMOTHY CORRIGAN AND IMELDA WHELEHAN (eds.) (2008), VOL. 1, NO. 1 AND NO. 2, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 99-100. William M Dabback James Madison University, School of Music, 800 South Main Street, Harrisonburg, VA 22807, United States of America Keywords identity, older adults, social interaction, Shenandoah Valley, community music Dr. William M. Dabback is Assistant Professor of Music Education at James Madison University in Virginia where he teaches courses in instrumental methods, instrument pedagogy and conducting. He received his MM and Ph.D. from the Eastman School of Music. Prior to commencing his doctoral work, he served twelve years as the Towanda High School band director in Pennsylvania. His research interests include the relationships between sociological interactions, learning and identity; musical improvisation; teacher preparation; and instrumental pedagogy. › Identity formation through participation in the Rochester New Horizons Band programme, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 267-286. › Exploring communities of music in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 213-227. Jerri Daboo The University of Exeter, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords Zen, Bhodhidharma, Hotei, Michael Chekhov, psychophysical, Steiner Jerri Daboo is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter. Her research focuses on a psychophysical approach to performance, and she has been training in and teaching the work of Michael Chekhov for five years. Her research and practice also examine an intercultural and interdisciplinary investigation of the bodymind in performance, including neurophysiology, sports psychology, Buddhism, and Chinese and Japanese forms of biomedicine. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.2, 125-. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 297-. › Michael Chekhov and the embodied imagination: Higher self and non-self, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 261-274. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 117-119. › To learn through the body: teaching Asian forms of training and performance in higher education, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 121-131. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 361-371. Robert Jude Daniels University of Chichester, Performing Arts, College Lane, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 6PE, United Kingdom Keywords phenomenology, physical theatre, practice as research, outdoor arts, live art, devised theatre, interdisciplinarity Robert is a senior lecturer in Performing Arts and Programme Coordinator for the MA Theatre Collectives. A graduate of the University of Northampton, and University of Kent; his research, practice and teaching interests include practice-based Research in Performance Studies, Live Art and Dance, Interdisciplinary Performance Composition, Street Theatre, site-specific theatre and devised contemporary performance. Robert is also artistic director of Bootworks Theatre Collective; a theatre company which tours internationally with a project called The Black Box (among other projects). Bootworks are supported by The British Council, Arts Council and have an association with Without Walls, The Battersea Arts Centre, Forest Fringe, Farnham Maltings and are a resident company in the ShowRoom theatre space at the University of Chichester. › Inside out: what is (my) practice in Performance Studies?, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 239-252. Glorianna Davenport Keywords culture, reflexivity, computing audience, identity, metaaudience, off-stage performance Glorianna Davenport is Visiting Scientist at the MIT Media Laboratory. Trained as a sculptor and film-maker, her work in digital media, storytelling and performance has continually expanded prevailing aesthetic paradigms, pioneered new channels of communication and invented compelling technological tools for rich media expression. › Self-reflexive performance: dancing with the computed audience of culture, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 237-. Pedro de Senna Buckinghamshire New University, Faculty of Design, Media and Management, Queen Alexandra Road, High Wycombe, HP11 2JZ, United Pedro de Senna is a theatre practitioner and academic. He is a lecturer in Drama at Buckinghamshire New University. His current research interests are intertextuality, translation and collaborative projects. Recent/current practice research includes 'The July 22nd Project', with Upstart Theatre (as an actor), and directing 'MILF' by Donna Savery. Kingdom His play The Tragedy of Ismene, princess of Thebes opened in the Centro Cultural Banco de Brasil, Rio de Janeiro, in 2007. Keywords Brazilian theatre, postcolonial theatre, theatre translation, Chico Buarque, Ruy Guerra › In Praise of Treason: Translating Calabar, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 33-44. › This Blasted translation: or location, dislocation, relocation, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 255-265. Peter De Vries Monash University, Faculty of Education, McMahons Road, Frankston, Victoria 3199, Australia Keywords performance, ageing, phenomenology, gerontology Dr. Peter de Vries is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Education at Monash University. Peter’s research revolves around early childhood learning and engagement in music, music teaching in the primary school, and active engagement with music in older age. Peter is currently early childhood chair for the Music Council of Australia. He has published his research in refereed journals such as Music Education Research, The International Journal of Music Education, Early Childhood Education Journal, and the International Journal of Education and the Arts. › Everyone deserves music: the role of music in the lives of two older Australians, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 245-254. Rob Dean University of Glamorgan, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Department of Drama and Music, Atrium, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2XF, United Kingdom Keywords underscoring, soundbridge, non-diegetic, Boucicault, Shyamalan Rob Dean is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Glamorgan. He recently completed his thesis entitled ‘UNPLUGGED: A comparative analysis of live Music in late Victorian Theatre and recorded Music in the modern sound film.’ His research into sound design has focused upon the similarities in aural techniques used by different forms of media incorporating the study of radio, television, installations and performance. He will also be researching the use of sound effects, music and dialogue in the original presentation of silent film. During the last year he has been creating and developing a musical genre which he has named ‘meme music’ which refers to an eclectic collection of sonic samples taken from all areas of entertainment. The aural material is mixed together to create both subjective and objective meaning through cultural references, thematic juxtaposition and musical connections. › From melodrama to blockbuster:a comparative analysis of musical camouflage in Victorian theatre and twenty-first-century film, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 139-152. Kathryn Deane Sound Sense, Riverside House, Rattlesden, Bury St Edmunds, IP30 0SF, United Kingdom Keywords community music, conferences, research and theory, practice and leadership Kathryn Deane ran large-scale community music projects across England before becoming director of Sound Sense, the UK association for community musicians, in 1995. She has carried out advocacy work across government, including as an author of the Music Manifesto report 'Making every child’s music matter'; she carries out major research into community music; and is an adviser to the Sing Up Beyond the Mainstream programme. She is a visiting lecturer on community music; editor of Sounding Board, the UK journal of community music; sits on the editorial board of the International Journal of Community Music; and co-edited Music And The Power Of Partnerships (National Association of Music Educators). She is deputy chair of the Music Manifesto Partnership and Advocacy Group; an executive member of the Music Education Council; and chair of Voluntary Arts Network. › 11th Community Music Activity International Seminar: A personal reflection, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 299-310. Piet Defraeye University of Alberta, Department of Drama, 11487 89 ave, Edmonton, AB, T6G 2M7, Canada Piet Defraeye is a theatre scholar, critic and director. He has published on Theatre of Provocation, political theatre and contemporary mise en scène in Canada and Europe in English, French, Dutch and German. He teaches at the University of Alberta. His research is focused on Reception Theories and Theatre of Provocation. Keywords political theatre, Theatre of Provocation › Theatre in Germany: summer 2007 theatre festivals in Munich and Heidelberg*, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 85-91. Jaime del Val Keywords body, embodiment, digital culture, performance, interactivity, technology Jaime del Val is a digital and visual artist, composer and pianist, choreographer and performer, writer, independent researcher, activist and director of REVERSO, the Body Technologies Project. His interactive dance performances have received several international awards. He regularly teaches the Body Technologies Workshop and has participated in numerous international congresses, festivals and exhibitions in the fields of digital and visual art, music, dance and critical theory. He has published on digital art, dance & technology and critical theory in diverse journals and is the editor of REVERSO, the first journal of queer theory in Spanish. › Situated Tékhne. Beyond the performative: metaformative bodies and the politics of technology in post-postmodernism, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 187-208. Scott deLahunta Keywords interactivity, art, technology, dance Scott deLahunta works from his base in Amsterdam as a researcher, writer, consultant and organizer on a wide range of international projects bringing performing arts into conjunction with other disciplines and practices. He is an Associate Research Fellow at Dartington College of Arts, Research Fellow with the Art Theory and Research and Art Practice and Development Research Group, Amsterdam School for the Arts, and Affiliated Researcher with Crucible (Cambridge University Network for Interdisciplinary Research). He lectures on the Amsterdam Master in Choreography and serves on the editorial boards of Performance Research, Dance Theatre Journal and the International Journal of Performance and Digital Media. › Isadora ‘almost out of beta’: tracing the development of a new software tool for performing artists, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 31-46. › Sharing descriptions of movement, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 3-16. Paul G. Dempster University of Leeds, School of Medicine, Leeds Institute of Health Sciences, Charles Thackrah Building, 101 Clarendon Road, Leeds, LS2 9LJ, United Kingdom Paul joined the Institute of Health Sciences in 2008. Currently he is a Research Manager and Fellow in the Academic Unit for Primary Care. His prior research in the Yorkshire Centre for Health Informatics and the Centre for Health and Social Care focussed on examining the rollout of electronic health programmes and investigating the role of governance within Foundation Trust Hospitals. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Keywords ageing, death, bereavement, social care Rea Dennis University of Glamorgan, School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Atrium Campus, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2NX, United Kingdom Keywords autobiography, memory, embodiment, improvisation, performance Rea Dennis is a scholar and practitioner based at the School of Creative and Cultural Industries, University of Glamorgan, UK. She has a long interest in story and theatre-based methodologies for cultural development and has applied these in various contexts over the past twenty years. She completed her Ph.D. in Applied Theatre at Griffith University in Australia in 2004. Her interests include unblocking human potential through expressive arts and autobiography/memory and physiological performance practices. › Big clumsy feet stomping all over: shame, caution and fear in performance for peace building*, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 53-66. Sarah Dickenson Keywords Theatre 503, dramaturg Sarah Dickenson is a dramaturg, director and project manager. Since 2000 she has worked for the national writers' organisation, Writernet, where her project work has focused on the development of training and resources to empower playwrights nationally and internationally. She has worked with individual playwrights as dramaturg and for the script departments of companies including The National Theatre, Oval House, Soho Theatre and Writers’ Centre, The Gate, The Donmar Warehouse and Graeae. She was formerly New Writing Associate for the Red Room and is currently dramaturg for Theatre 503 and for the Responses programme at the Hall for Cornwall. › The Commotion Time – Whitsun experiments, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 45-50. Sarah Jane Dickenson University of Hull, United Kingdom, The Drama Department, Cottingham Road, Hull, HU6 7RX, United Kingdom Sarah Jane Dickenson is the deputy Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences and a senior lecturer in drama at the University of Hull, UK and a National Teaching Fellow. She specializes in applied drama, and the structure of written drama. She has been commissioned to write plays for young people to perform in a variety of situations and for a variety of purposes. Keywords scriptwriting, applied drama, theatre, Euripides › After Cyclops: Appropriating the chorus of Euripides when scriptwriting for applied drama, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 291-304. › The Tipping Point, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 305328. Steve Dillon Queensland University of Technology, Senior Lecturer, Faculty of Creative Industries: Music & Sound, Queensland University of Technology, Victoria Park Rd. Kelvin Grove, Qld. Australia Keywords engagement, generative, virtual, networking, ensemble Steve C. Dillon studied music education at the University of South Australia, before completing a master of music education and a doctorate of philosophy at La Trobe University in Melbourne. He has combined a career as a professional singer songwriter with school music teaching. He is a senior lecturer in music and sound at Queensland University of Technology, director of the DISC Research Network and project leader of the Network Jamming Research Group. Steve is series editor of the 'Meaningful Music Making for Life' book series and reviewer for international journals. He is current president of the Musicological Society of Australia, Queensland branch, and is an active affiliate of ISME and ASME. His research interests focus on meaningful engagement with music making, and designing digital media technologies and relational pedagogies to provide access to cognitive growth, health and well being through music making. › Communities of sound: Examining meaningful engagement with generative music making and virtual ensembles, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 357-374. › eBILITY: from tool use to partnerships, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 201-215. Steve Dixon Brunel University, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords temporality, disorientation, digital arts, postmodernism, freeze-frame, theatre Steve Dixon is Professor of Performance and Technology at Brunel University in West London, where he is also Head of School of Arts, and Deputy Director of the BitLab Research Centre. He has a professional background in theatre, film, television, opera and stand-up comedy, and his recent creative practice-as-research includes international multimedia theatre tours as director of The Chameleons Group (since 1994), two award winning CD-ROMs, interactive Internet performances and telematic arts events. He has published extensively on several subjects, including performance studies, digital arts, robotics, Artificial Intelligence and pedagogy. He is Associate Editor of The International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, and co-director of The Digital Performance Archive. › Theatre, technology, and time, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 11-30. › A history of virtual reality in performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 23-54. › The philosophy and psychology of the scenographic house in multimedia theatre, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 724. Philipp Dorstewitz Maastricht University, Faculty of Arts and Social Science (FASoS), Grote Gracht 80-82, PO Box 616, MD Maastricht, 6211, Netherlands Keywords urban planning, deliberation, social planning Philipp Dorstewitz obtained his Ph.D. from the London School of Economics with a thesis on John Dewey's philosophy and its application of social and urban planning. Trained in philosophy and business studies he held temporary teaching appointments at the University College, Dublin and at the London School of Economics. Since 2007 he has been a full time lecturer at Maastricht University where he teaches in the arts and culture program. Philipp Dorstewitz has published several articles on the link between philosophy, policy and imaginative forms of deliberation. › Community, communication, social change: Music in dispossessed Indian communities, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 59-70. Oliver Double University of Kent, Eliot College, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7NS, United Kingdom Keywords Munich cabaret, Liesl Karlstadt, politics, Nazism, Brecht Oliver Double started his career as a stand-up comedian and is now a senior lecturer in Drama at the University of Kent. He is the author of Stand-up! On Being a Comedian (1997) and Getting the Joke (2005). He has also written chapters and articles on comedy, cabaret, Variety theatre and punk. His stand-up comedy DVD Saint Pancreas, produced as part of a practice-as-research project, is available from the University of Kent website. › Teaching Stand-Up Comedy: a mission impossible?, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.1, 14-23. › Karl Valentin's ‘Father and Son Discuss the War’, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 5-12. › ‘I am a Poor, Skinny Man’: Persona and physicality in the work of Karl Valentin, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 213-221. › Not the definitive version: an interview with Ross Noble, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 5-19. Denise Doyle University of Wolverhampton, School of Art & Design, Wolverhampton, West Midlands, WV1 1SB, United Kingdom Keywords Second Life, Spinoza, body, technology, Internet Denise is a senior lecturer in Digital Media at the University of Wolverhampton and Ph.D. candidate at SMARTlab, University of East London. She contributes to the contextual and practice-based strand of the UG Digital Media programme at Wolverhampton. She is a theorist and new media practitioner. Her research interests include: virtual worlds, interactive film, database cinema, philosophies of the imagination, practice-based research methods, critical theory and media arts practice, phenomenological and ethnographic research methods, digital narratives, and multiplayer games and virtual learning environments. › Embodied narrative: The virtual nomad and the meta dreamer, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 209-222. › Art and the avatar: the kritical works in SL project, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 137-153. Natalie Draper Independent Scholar Keywords Stephen Sondheim, concept musical, metadrama, Richard Hornby, psychological narrative Natalie Draper received her BA in Music from Carleton College in Northfield, Minnesota and her MM in Composition from the University of Cincinnati’s College-Conservatory of Music in Cincinnati, Ohio. She currently works as a freelance composer in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area, where she writes concert music for acoustic, electroacoustic and electronic mediums. Natalie currently works as a music theory Teaching Assistant for Frances McKay’s AP Music Theory course at the Levine School of Music in Washington, D.C. › Concept meets narrative in Sondheim's Company: Metadrama as a method of analysis, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 171-183. Paul Draper Griffith University, Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre, 58 Parklands Dr, Gold Coast, QLD 4215, Australia Keywords knowledge transfer, music 2.0, music technology, praxis intervention, social networking Paul Draper is Professor of Digital Arts in the Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre and the Centre for Public Culture and Ideas at Griffith University. He is a musician and head of Music Technology at the Queensland Conservatorium where he has written and convened degree programs in sound production, multimedia and popular music. Paul is the Director of IMERSD, the Australian university sector’s premier 5.1 surround-sound recording and postproduction studios, engaging in industry projects, work-integrated learning, research training and the creation of public value through the open access podcasting site, Radio IMERSD. Paul publishes as an active record producer and writes on higher education and the arts. › Music two-point-zero: music, technology and digital independence, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 137-152. John Drummond University of Otago, Music, Department of Music, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand Keywords Ngati Toa, whanau, community music, training John Drummond, BA, BMus, Ph.D., is Blair Professor of Music at the University of Otago in New Zealand. He trained in the United Kingdom as a musicologist and composer specializing in opera. In the late 1980s he became involved in music education, joining the ISME Commission on Community Music Activity, which he chaired from 1990-92. He joined the ISME Board in 1995 and was elected president from 2000-02. From 2002-04 he was on the Steering Group for the International Music Council project on musical diversity, and has been a member of the Cultural Diversity in Music Education Network for many years. In 2008 John co-authored a report on Cultural Policy for the NZ Government, Culture Matters. He is currently engaged in a research project on the Future of Opera within the research programme Sustainable Futures for Musical Cultures, hosted by the Queensland › Prelude: The ISME Commission on community music activity and its Oslo seminar, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 327-329. › The multicultural dimension: Thoughts on the special experience of the New Zealand seminar, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 317-320. Patrick Duggan University of Northampton, Avenue Campus, St George’s Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords trauma, physicality, audience, performance, theatre, philosophy, ethics, practice Patrick is a lecturer in the Division of Performance Studies, University of Northampton. Much of his research is interdisciplinary in nature and all of it is informed by and reflected in his practice. Patrick's primary research interests include: contemporary British and Irish theatre, performance and Live Art; trauma theory and performance; psychoanalysis and performance; performance practice; theatre of the 1990s; directors and directing; philosophy and performance. Patrick writes on, curates and creates performance and theatre; he is co-founder of and director with Crisis Theatre, with whom his directorial credits include The Birthday Party, Did You Hear The One About The Irishman?, and 4.48 Psychosis. He has been extensively involved in devising and performing work focusing on physical limits, the body, duration and notions of contemporary masculinity. › The touch and the cut: an annotated dialogue with Kira O'Reilly, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 307-325. Zachary Dunbar Central School of Speech and Drama, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords culture, history, Dionysus, Michael Bennett, chorus, A Chorus Line, Nietzsche, Richard Schechner, Dionysus in ’69 Zachary Dunbar is a concert pianist and a theatre practitioner and composer (www.zebfontaine.com). His original UK productions are Delphi, Texas, Quaternary, Year of the Pig, Out of Character and The Cows Come Home. He holds a Ph.D. from Royal Holloway (University of London), and is a lecturer in Music Theatre and Greek Tragedy at Central School of Speech and Drama. His forthcoming publications include chapters in Theorising Performance: Greek Drama (Duckworth), The Cambridge Companion to Theatre History (Cambridge) and Theatre Noise: The Sound of Performance (Cambridge Scholars). › Dionysian reflections upon A Chorus Line, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 155-169. Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic University of Manchester, Martin Harris Centre for Music and Drama, Oxford Road, Manchester, Greater Manchester, M13 9PL, United Kingdom Keywords Robert Lepage, theatre, directing, Brazilian theatre, Zulu Time, multimedia, performance, Dr. Aleksandar Dundjerovic is a lecturer in Contemporary Performance and Directing, and his specialist area is the work opus of Robert Lepage. His books include The cinema of Robert Lepage: Poetics of Memory (2003) and Theatricality of Robert Lepage (2006). He is MA program director for Theatre practice in Drama at the University of Manchester. › Juliette at Zulu Time: Robert Lepage and the aesthetics of ‘techno-en-scene’, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 69-86. mise-en-scene, robotics, technology, digital media, interdisciplinarity Michael Dunn University Centre, Doncaster College, School of Arts, South Yorkshire, DN5 7SZ, United Kingdom Michael Dunn lectures on the BA Creative Music Technology degree programme at University Centre, Doncaster. His research interests include creativity and compositional processes of composers and the role of sonic elements in multimedia art, with a particular focus on failure as an artistic concept. Keywords creativity and compositional processes of composers, sonic elements in multimedia art, failure › Problem-solving strategies and processes in musical composition: Observations in real time, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 47-76. Becky Dyer Arizona State University, 96 West Ranch Road, Tempe, AZ 85284, United States of America Keywords dance pedagogy, postmodern dance, somatic movement, somatic epistemology Becky Dyer (Ph.D., M.F.A., M.S.) is an Assistant Professor in the School of Dance at Arizona State University where she teaches Laban/Bartenieff Praxis and Somatic Studies, dance pedagogy and contemporary postmodern dance technique. Becky is a certified LabanBartenieff Movement Analyst (CLMA), ISMETA registered somatic movement therapist (RSMT), ISMETA registered somatic movement educator (RSME), and holds a secondary dance education certification. Her research focuses on somatic approaches to teaching and learning, somatic epistemology, transformative learning perspectives and collaborative enquiry process. Becky’s work has been published in Research in Dance Education, the Journal of Aesthetic Education and Somatics Magazine/Journal. She also authored two chapters of the book, Dance: Current Selected Research, vol. 7. › Somatic voyages: Exploring ego, self and possibilities through the Laban/Bartenieff framework, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 233-250. Martha Eddy Moving On Center, Somatic Movement Therapy, 49 West 27th Street, New York, NY, 10001, United States of America Keywords somatics, body, education, Martha Eddy, CMA, RSMT, Ed.D. is Director of the Dynamic Embodiment Somatic Movement Therapy Training (DE-SMTT) affiliated with Moving On Center and in partnership with the State University of New York – Empire State College where she is Adjunct Associate Professor. DE-SMTT is housed at the Center for Kinesthetic Education in New York City. CKE provides somatic movement sessions to individuals of all ages and professional consulting to therapy schools, hospitals, and community centers in the use of movement and kinesthetic awareness in education, health, and creative endeavors. She is an author, worldwide lecturer, and choreographer of community dance. Her curricula are affiliated with undergraduate, MA and doctoral programing at SUNY-ESC, Javeriana University, the International University of Professional Studies (IUPS) and Santa Barbara Graduate Institute (SBGI). › A brief history of somatic practices and dance: historical development of the field of somatic education and its relationship to dance, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 5-27. Braínne Edge Salford University, Media and Performance Division, Adelphi Building, Peru St, Salford, M5 4WT, United Kingdom Keywords improvisation, comedy, television, audience Braínne Edge’s varied improvisation training stems from classes with Keith Johnstone, Neil Mullarkey (The Comedy Store Players, London), Mick Napier (Annoyance Theater, Chicago), Kate Watson (The Second City, Chicago), and Dick Chudnow (ComedySportz Founder), to name a few. She has performed improvisation in just under half of the states in the USA, as well as all over the UK and Ireland. She manages and facilitates a successful Improv and Stand Up training programme at the Comedy Store, Manchester. Braínne achieved a first-class honours degree in Media and Performance from Salford University and a MA in Film and Video from The Surrey Institute of Art and Design. Braínne founded the UK division of ComedySportz in 2001.Braínne is also a lecturer in Performance at Salford University and currently heads its Television Comedy modules. › Comedy improvisation on television: does it work?, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 101-111. Kathryn Edney Independent scholar, Regis College, 214 Main Street, Freeport, Maine, 4032, United States of America Keywords race, civil rights, Juanita Hall, Flower Drum Song Kathryn Edney earned her Ph.D. in American Studies at Michigan State University; her dissertation is entitled ‘“Gliding through Our Memories”: The Performance of Nostalgia in American Musical Theater’. She served as the managing editor for the Journal of Popular Culture for two years and now serves on its editorial board. She is currently an adjunct instructor of American History at Regis College (Weston, MA). › Integration through the wide open back door: African Americans respond to Flower Drum Song (1958), Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 261-272. Geoffrey Edwards Université Laval,, Departement of Geomatics Sciences, Pavillon Casault, Sainte-Foy, Québec, G1K 7P4, Canada Keywords performance, spatial design, audience perceptions, image schemata, multi-modality, new media Geoffrey Edwards is a senior scientist in geomatics who has long worked at the interface between disciplines. His work over the past ten years has been concerned with using insights from cognitive science to develop improved tools for spatial representation and analysis. For the past two years, Dr. Edwards has been integrating this approach into the performing arts as well as creating a body of work as a sculptor. Dr. Edwards and Ms. Marie Louise Bourbeau are partners in a company called Master Sharing International, formed to facilitate the collaboration between the arts and the sciences. › Image schemata - a guiding principle for multi-modal expression in performance design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 189-206. Alistair Edwards University of York, Department of Computer Science, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD, United Kingdom Keywords computer speech, speech synthesis, synthetic actors, voice acting, speech interfaces Alistair Edwards is a senior lecturer in Computer Science at the University of York. He has research interests in human-computer interaction. In particular he has been investigating the use of ‘novel’ forms of interaction – that is interaction which goes beyond the keyboard, mouse and screen, and includes speech, as well as nonspeech sounds. He has published around 100 research papers and is author or co-author of a number of books, including two on the use of speech output in human-machine interaction. › Place, authenticity time: a framework for synthetic voice acting, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 155180. Alistair D. N. Edwards University of York, Department of Computer Science, Deramore Lane, Heslington, York, YO10 5GH, United Kingdom Keywords human-computer interaction, liveness, synthetic speech, computer-generated, actors, mediatized, pauses Alistair Edwards is a Senior Lecturer in Computer Science at the University of York. He has research interests in human-computer interaction. In particular he has been investigating the use of ‘novel’ forms of interaction – that is interaction which goes beyond the keyboard, mouse and screen, and includes speech, as well as nonspeech sounds. He has published around 100 research papers and is author or co-author of a number of books, including two on the use of speech output in human-machine interaction. › ‘Liveness’ in human-machine interaction, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 221-237. Garrett Eisler CUNY Graduate Center, Theatre, City University of New York, 365 Fifth Ave, New York, 10016, United States of America Keywords American drama, musical theatre, Jewish studies Garrett Eisler is currently completing a Ph.D. in Theatre Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York City. He previously received an MA in Literature from New York University and an MFA in Directing from Boston University. He has contributed essays to Studies in Musical Theatre, The Journal of American Drama and Theatre, The Eugene O'Neill Review, and the Best Plays Theatre Yearbook series. His essay on Stephen Sondheim's Road Show will appear in the forthcoming Oxford Handbook on Sondheim Studies. He also edited the most recent Dictionary of Literary Biography volume on '20th Century American Dramatists'. As a critic, he has reviewed plays for Time Out New York and the Village Voice and writes on contemporary theatre for his › Kidding on the level: the reactionary project of I’d Rather Be Right, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 7-24. › Encores! and the downsizing of the classic American musical, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.2, 133-148. David Elliott New York University, 35 West 4th St, New York, 10012, United Kingdom Keywords music education, community music, philosophy, creativity Dr. David J. Elliott is Professor of Music and Music Education at New York University. For 27 years, he was Professor and Coordinator of Music Education at the University of Toronto. He has held visiting professorships at several universities, including Indiana, North Texas, Northwestern, and Limerick. He is the author of Music Matters: A New Philosophy of Music Education (Oxford, 1995); editor of Praxial Music Education: Reflections and Dialogues (Oxford, 2005); founder and co-editor of the International Journal of Community Music; and an award-winning composer/arranger with works published by Boosey & Hawkes. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 3-4. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 139-141. Sarah T. Ellis University of California at Los Angeles, Theatre and Performance Studies, 507 Raymond Ave., Santa Monica, 90405, United States of America Sarah T. Ellis is a Ph.D. student in Theatre and Performance Studies at the University of California at Los Angeles. In 2008, she graduated summa cum laude from Duke University with a BA in Theatre Studies/Music and English. In addition to composing new musical theatre, she researches the intersections of formal and social integration in the American musical. Keywords musicals, theatre, temporality, corporeality, integration › Establishing (and re-establishing) a sense of place: musical orientation in The Sound of Music, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 277-283. Simon Ellis Roehampton University, Senior Lecturer, Dance (Practice-based), Froebel College, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PJ, United Kingdom Keywords audience, collaboration, failure, Choreodrome Simon Ellis is a New Zealand-born independent performance maker and performer with a broad practice founded on choreographic traditions. He has a practice-led Ph.D. (investigating improvisation, remembering, documentation and liveness) and is currently Senior Lecturer in dance at the University of Roehampton in London. His choreographies have included site-specific investigations, screendance, installation, webart, and more conventional black box works. Recent projects include Anamnesis, and Desire Lines for Place Prize 2010. › My name is Colin, and this is Simon, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 65-78. Manny Emslie The University of Chester, Kingsway Building, Kingsway, Newton, Chester, CH2 2LB, United Kingdom Keywords Skinner Releasing Technique, pedagogy, somatic Manny Emslie is a certified facilitator of Skinner Releasing Technique. She has recently joined the Faculty of Performing Arts at the University of Chester, where she is a Senior Lecturer in Dance. Manny is currently working on a solo for performance that is informed by Skinner Releasing principles and sensory experiences of time and place. › Skinner Releasing Technique: dancing from within, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 169-175. Helena Enright University of Exeter, The Queen's Dr, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4QJ, United Kingdom Keywords school projects, directing Helena Enright is a freelance theatre practitioner. A founder member of Amalgamotion Theatre Company, she has worked as both a director and actor in theatre and film. As a teacher and facilitator she has worked on many outreach, community and school projects in Ireland and more recently the United Kingdom. She is the author of four plays, Less Than a Year (2006), Walking Away (2007), Under Pressure (2008) and Aquéro (2010). She is currently completing doctoral research at the University of Exeter. › Letting it breathe: Writing and performing the words of others, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.2, 181-192. Megan Evans Megan Evans, Ph.D. (Hawai’i), is a lecturer in Theatre at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Her research focuses on xiqu Victoria University of Wellington Theatre Programme, PO Box 600, Wellington, 6140, New Zealand (indigenous Chinese music drama) in contemporary China, and has included two years of study at the National Academy of Chinese Theatre Arts in Beijing. Her work has appeared in the Asian Theatre Journal, Theatre Research International. Keywords Chinese theatre, jingju, Peking opera, Beijing opera, Camel Xiangzi, Lutuo Xiangzi › Signifying Beijing: Legitimizing innovation in the Chinese jingju play Camel Xiangzi, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.2, 181-193. Kate Evans Scarborough Psychotherapy Training Institute, 117 Columbus Ravine, Scarborough, YO12 7QU, United Kingdom Keywords creativity,, creative writing therapeutic writing, free writing, writerly self, mental well-being, depression Kate Evans BSc MA is a writer and a UKCP-registered psychotherapeutic counsellor, working out of Scarborough Psychotherapy Training Institute. She is co-ordinator of, and tutor on, the BA (Hons) in Creative Writing at the University of Hull Scarborough Campus. › The chrysalis and the butterfly: A phenomenological study of one person’s writing journey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 173-186. William A. Everett University of Missouri-Kansas, City Conservatory of Music and Dance, Kansas City, MO 64110, United States of America Keywords Candide, Bernstein, Hellman, Romberg, Friml William Everett is Professor of Musicology and Associate Dean for Graduate Studies and Curriculum at the University of Missouri-Kansas City Conservatory of Music and Dance. His books include Rudolf Friml, Sigmund Romberg, The Musical: A Research and Information Guide, On Bunker’s Hill: Essays in Honor of J. Bunker Clark (coeditor), Historical Dictionary of the Broadway Musical (co-author), and The Cambridge Companion to the Musical (co-editor). › Candide and the tradition of American operetta, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 53-59. Dave Everitt De Montfort University, Institute of Creative Technologies, 30 Woodland Avenue, Melton Mowbray, Leicestershire, LE13 1DZ, United Kingdom Dave Everitt is an artist and researcher whose work concerns physiological input in mediated art, the interplay of order and disorder in mathematical pattern and collaborative live art-technology projects. A research fellow at Leicester's Institute of Creative technologies, former visiting researcher and artist at Creativity and Cognition Research Studios at Loughborough University, and a recipient of Arts Council England funding, he maintains two occasionally productive collaborative art-technology projects. His principal interests are the Keywords emergence, collaboration, transdisciplinary, art-technology, internet, computer programming implications of the interdisciplinary sciences for artists and creators, and web programming culture/technologies; he runs a media information design consultancy, lectures and researches in New Media and art-technology partnerships. › Emergence and complexity: Some observations and reflections on transdisciplinary research involving performative contexts and new media, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 239252. David Fallow The University of Exeter, The Queen's Dr, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4QJ, United Kingdom Keywords Shakespeare, Elizabethan apprenticeship, leather industry, usury, recusancy Dr. David Fallow completed his doctoral studies at the Department of Drama of the University of Exeter in 2011. In the 1970s, before embarking on a career in international finance, he graduated in Scots Law at the University of Aberdeen. He also holds a BA in Theatre from Dartington College of Arts and an MA in Staging Shakespeare from the University of Exeter. › Like father like son: Financial practices in the Shakespeare family, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 253-263. › Notes and queries 1: Hamlet, Crowner's courts and the exhumation of rotted corpses, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 113-120. Laura Farrell-Wortman University of Arizona, 5433 E Fairmount Pl, Tucson,, Arizona, AZ 85712, United States of America Laura Farrell-Wortman is an MA candidate in Theatre Studies at the University of Arizona. She is a graduate of New York University, with a BA in Irish Literature. Her research considers the intersections between dramatic production, Irish identity and the European Union. › The Riverdance phenomenon and the development of Irish identity in the global era, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 311-319. Keywords Ireland, globalization, European Union, Riverdance, Irish dance Dita Judith Federman University of Haifa, Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies, DMT training, Mt. Carmel, Haifa, 31905, Israel Dita Federman is a researcher, lecturer and the director of Dance Movement Therapy training at the Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies, University of Haifa, Israel. She is an accredited Dance Movement Therapist, psychotherapist and senior supervisor (DMT). Dr. Federman has experience working within psychiatric settings and with children, adults and the geriatric population. Keywords empathy, kinesthetic ability, DMT, group, training, assessment › Kinesthetic ability and the development of empathy in Dance Movement Therapy, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 137-154. Anne Fenech Keywords leisure, drama, engagement, neuroscience, therapy Anne Fenech is currently a lecturer at the University of Southampton School of Health Sciences. Her background is in management (MBA), gerontology (MSc) and occupational therapy (DipCOT). Her career history has included several Head Occupational therapist posts before moving into general/policy management and more recently a research fellowship. She is currently the English Board Member for the South East Region of the College of Occupational Therapists and also a Registration Assessor for the Health Professions Council. › Inspiring transformations through participation in drama for individuals with neuropalliative conditions, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 63-80. Anna Fenemore University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries,, Leeds, LS2 9JT., United Kingdom Keywords interactivity, participation, virtual, performance, telematic Dr. Anna Fenemore is a lecturer in Theatre and Performance in the School of Performance and Cultural Industries at Leeds University. Her research and teaching interests include: spectating embodiment; performer bodywork training; multi-sensory immersive performance; performance and phenomenology; theories of performance space/place; and performance and death studies. Anna is also Artistic Director of Manchester based Pigeon Theatre, an all-women, experimental performance company. Pigeon Theatre are currently Associate Artists at the Green Room Manchester. Anna also works as a performer/devisor. › Dialogical interaction and social participation in physical and virtual performance space, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 37-58. David Fenton Keywords Hotel Pro Porma, intermediality, mediatization, mimesis, Algebra of Parapraxis David Fenton is an Australian contemporary performance maker, theatre director and academic. From 2007-09 David was lecturer in Performance Studies at the Creative Industries Faculty of Queensland University of Technology, where he completed his award winning Ph.D., 'Unstable Acts -a practice-led investigation in Performance Innovation 2007'. David has been a freelance theatre director in Australia for twenty years. His theatre works have toured nationally and internationally. From 2000-02 David was Festival Director for Sydney Gay and Lesbian Mardi Gras Festival, from 1996-99 he was Artistic Director of Riverina Theatre Company and most recently David was Artistic Director of Replay Theatre Company Northern Ireland. His most recent research interests are the ethics of Applied Theatre and Intermediality in children’s theatre practice. › Hotel Pro Forma's The Algebra of Place; destabilising the original and the copy in intermedial contemporary performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 169-182. › The Empty City: A practice-led study in intermedial theatre-making, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 157-172. Stephen Fernandez Nanyang Technological University, 50 Nanyang Avenue, Singapore, 639798, Singapore Keywords augmented reality, virtual reality, theatre masks, virtual masks, Gopal Baratham Stephen Fernandez is has completed his MA in English at the Nanyang Technological University where he had previously received a BA (First Class Honours) degree in English Literature. He has strong research interests in modern drama, the confluence of digital technology and contemporary theatre practice, critical theory, hermeneutics, postmodernism as well as 'postmodern ethics'. Stephen has written a MA thesis which looks at the relationship between ethics and postmodernism (i.e., 'postmodern ethics') in the dramatic works of Harold Pinter. › Digitally augmented reality characters in live theatre performances, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 35-49. Helen Ferrara Murdoch University, 90 South Street, Murdoch WA, 6150, Australia Keywords tourism, marketing, teaching, social change Helen Ferrara is first and foremost a parent who is passionate about the world we are bequeathing to our children. Living in different countries including England, Italy and Australia, as well as working in the varied fields of tourism, marketing and teaching, has enabled her to develop a perspective that is questioning and open to renewal. It is just such a holistic perspective, together with a more egalitarian social change, which she actively promotes in her writing. Helen has recently submitted a thesis on the nurturing of creativity for her Ph.D. at Murdoch University. › Child’s play: We can all bewinners with creativity, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 225-227. Giselle M. d. S Ferreira Open University, Faculty of Maths, Computing and Technology, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, MK7 6AA, United Kingdom Keywords music technology, open education, curriculum,team teaching Giselle Ferreira is a lecturer at the Department of Communication and Systems, Faculty of Maths, Computing and Technology at the UK Open University, where she is part of the team responsible for the introduction, integration and development of music technology in the university's curriculum. Giselle has a multidisciplinary background in electronics engineering, music and education, and her research interests revolve around issues surrounding disciplinarity, with particular interest on questions that arise in the relationship between education, technology and politics. She is a Fellow of the UK Higher Education Academy and has been recently awarded a Teaching Fellowship at the Open University's Centre for Open Learning of Mathematics, Science, Computing and Technology, COLMSCT. Giselle is currently a member of the Academic Team supporting OpenLearn, the university's Open Educational Resources Initiative. › Crossing borders: issues in music technology education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 23-36. Joe Fierro Santa Ana Jail Keywords prison, rehabilitation, CD, Santa Ana, California After graduating from New Mexico State University with a degree in Music Education, Joe Fierro moved to Southern California, where he has spent many years as a professional musician doing studio work as well as playing with various musical groups. Joe is a registered investment advisor representative and a member of the worship team at church, and he also plays with the local bands. › Free inside: The music class at Santa Ana Jail, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 143-150. Andrew Filmer University of Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies, Parry Williams Bldg, Penglais, Aberystwyth, Dyfed, SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Andrew Filmer is a lecturer in drama, theatre and performance in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies at Aberystwyth University. His research addresses issues of place, space and performance, improvisation, theatre architecture and backstage space. His work has appeared in New Theatre Quarterly, Australasian Drama Studies and the edited collection Patronage, Spectacle and the Stage (2006). Keywords space, theatre, inhabitation, performance, practice, professional craft › Making space for performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 275-287. Teresa A Fisher New York University, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, 82 Washington Square East, Pless Hall, 2nd Floor Annex, New York, NY 10012, United States of America Keywords Boal, facilitation, applied theatre, informed consent Teresa A. Fisher is a doctoral candidate in the educational theatre programme at New York University. A former mental health counsellor and play therapist, Teresa’s interest is in using theatre to explore how we understand our bodies, focusing on obesity. She is an educator, theatre artist, and an administrator. She is also the Production Manager/Administrator for the Program in Educational Theatre’s New Plays for Young Audiences summer series for the New York City Arts in Education Roundtable. › First do no harm: Informed consent principles for trust and understanding in applied theatre practice, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 157-164. Jason Fitzgerald Yale College, 1120 Chapel Street, New Haven, CT 06510-2302, United States of America Keywords effigy, celebrity, Rose's Turn, Patti LuPone, identity Jason Fitzgerald earned his MFA in Dramaturgy and Dramatic Criticism from Yale School of Drama in 2008, and his AB from Harvard College in 2004. He is currently a teaching fellow at Yale College and a freelance theatre reviewer in New York City, writing theatre reviews for Backstage, among others. He is currently working towards a a Ph.D. in the theatre subcommittee of the Department of English and Comparative Literature at Columbia University. › ‘I had a dream’: ‘Rose's Turn’, musical theatre and the star effigy, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 285-291. Sylvie Fortin Université du Québec à Montréal, Dance, C.P. 8888, Succ CebntreVille, Montréal, H3C-3P8, Canada Keywords health, Foucault, Feldenkrais Method, dance Sylvie Fortin, Ph.D., is Associate Professor at the Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada, and director of the graduate programmes in dance and somatic education. She is well known as a somatic practitioner and prolific author of body-related issues in the arts. Sylvie is currently involved in a series of funded research projects focusing on the constructions of health. She is part of CINBIOSE (Centre for the Study of Biological Interactions on Human Health) and ‘Invisible That Hurts’, two interdisciplinary research groups that favour an interdisciplinary and feminist approach. › The experience of discourses in dance and somatics, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 47-64. Jonathan Foster University of Sheffield, Department of Information Studies, Regent Court, 211 Portobello Street, Sheffield, S1 4DP, United Kingdom Jonathan Foster is a lecturer in Information Management at the University of Sheffield, where he teaches information management in the digital economy, and information management and strategy. His research interests are in information and knowledge management and strategy, educational informatics, computer-based collaborative group work and learning, and digital economy. Keywords mixed reality, performance, interactive art, archiving, information, architecture, metadata, replay, practice-based research › Riders Have Spoken: A practice-based approach to developing an information architecture for the archiving and replay of a mixed reality performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 209-223. Anthony Fothergill The University of Exeter, The Queen's Dr, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4QJ, United Kingdom Keywords cultural history, contemporary theory, Joseph Conrad, modern literature Anthony Fothergill teaches English at the University of Exeter. He has also taught at the University of Heidelberg. His translations include a very early drama by Mozart and ‘The Foreign Policy of the Third Reich’. Anthony's book Secret Sharers, Joseph Conrad and his Cultural Reception in Germany’ (Peter Lang Verlag) was published in 2006. The focus of his intellectual and research interests is modern (mainly English and European) literature, cultural history, and contemporary theory. His current, interdisciplinary, research concentrates on Joseph Conrad and Germany and the politics of cultural reception. He has published on a number of modernist writers in addition to Conrad, including Virginia Woolf, T.S. Eliot, and Thomas Mann; on literary and philosophical modernity; and on literature and film. › Bertolt Brecht's ‘Measures against Authority’, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 169-170. David Francis University of Brighton, Centre for Research in Innovation Management, Falmer, Brighton,, BN1 9PH, United Kingdom Keywords technology transfer, soft technology, continuous improvement, facilitation, Africa David Francis is Deputy Director of the Centre for Research in Innovation Management. › REVIEWS, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 117-123. Ben Francombe University of Chichester, Bishop Otter Campus, College Lane, Chichester, PO19 6PE, United Kingdom Keywords performance strategy, British theatre, individuality, solo performance, postolonial discourse Dr. Ben Francombe is Head of Performing Arts at the University of Chichester. His Ph.D. (Glasgow University, 1993) was on the development of performance strategies for new writing at the Abbey Theatre Dublin. He worked as a freelance theatre director before becoming the director of the Ramshorn New Playwrights Initiative based at Strathclyde University. He has taught at the Royal Scottish Academy of Music and Drama, Liverpool John Moores University, Bretton Hall (were he was Head of Acting) and the University of Leeds. His main research interests are in Marginality and Postcolonial discourse in contemporary British Theatre; Individuality and Solo Performance; Twentieth Century Irish Theatre and the Politics of Performance Training. He has published and presented at conferences recently on the subjects of the Scottish National Theatre, Practice as Research in Performance, British Actor Training and on the work of playwrights Brian Friel, Tom Murphy and Frank McGuinness. › Falling Off a Wall: Degrees of Change in British Actor Training, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.3, 176-187. Paul J. C. M Franssen English Department, Trans 10, 3512 JK, Utrecht, Netherlands Keywords adaptation, disillusionment, radical socialism, contemporary arts, Arnold Wesker, The Merchant, Shakespeare Paul J. C. M. Franssen is a lecturer at the English Department of Utrecht University, The Netherlands. He has published widely on Shakespeare and adaptations of Shakespeare. He is a board member of the Shakespeare Society of the Low Countries and editor of its periodical, Folio. He has co-edited The Author as Character (AUP, 1999), Shakespeare and European Politics (University of Delaware Press, 2008) and Shakespeare and War (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). › But never mind about politics: Arnold Wesker's The Merchant and its critics, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 245-258. Jason Freeman Georgia Institute of Technology, Center for Music Technology, Georgia Tech, 840 McMillan Street, Atlanta, Georgia, 30332, United States of America Jason Freeman is Assistant Professor in the School of Music at Georgia Tech, where he teaches Music Technology and serves as executive director of the university's ensemble-in-residence. As a composer, Freeman's works break down conventional barriers between composers, performers and listeners. His music has been performed by the American Composers Orchestra, the Rova Saxophone Quartet, the So Percussion Group and the Nieuw Ensemble, among others. Keywords Internet, participation, music, open form, interactivity, online culture › Web-based collaboration, live musical performance and open-form scores, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 149-170. John Freeman Curtin University of Technology, Kent St., Bentley WA, 6102, Australia Keywords solo performance, autoethnographic research, creative processes John Freeman came to Curtin University in 2010 from Brunel University West London, where he was Reader in Theatre, Senior Tutor and Deputy Head for the School of Arts. He is author of Tracing the Footprints (2003) New Performance/New Writing (2007) Blood, Sweat & Theory: Research through Practice in Performance (2010) and The Greatest Shows on Earth (2011). In addition to these books he has written for over 30 international journals, with articles on solo performance, autoethnographic research, creative processes, new strategies for performance, theatre of identity and displacement and creative practice-based research. His chapter on John Leguizamo's live performances ('Socializing the Self: Autoethnographical Performance and the Social Signature') appears in Sensualities/Textualities and Technologies: Writings of the Body in 21st Century Performance (2010). › Writing the self: the heuristic documentation of performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.2, 95-106. Helen Freshwater University of London, Birbeck College, Department of English and Humanities, Malet Street, Bloomsbury, London, WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom › The Author: Tim Crouch inconversation with HelenFreshwater, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 181-195. Keywords dramaturg, theatre, physical theatre Michael Fry East 15 Acting School, Hatfields, Rectory Lane, Loughton, Essex, IG10 3RY, United Kingdom Keywords Hardy, transference challenges, prose narrative, drama Dr. Michael Fry has been a director and writer for over twenty years. He was previously Arts Council Associate Director at Chester Gateway and Liverpool Everyman theatres, Artistic Director of Great Eastern Stage and NOT The National Theatre, Professor of Directing at Washington University and Senior Lecturer at Coventry University. He has edited ‘Frontline Drama 4’ for Methuen (1996), produced critical introductions of ‘The Critic’, ‘The Caretaker’ and ‘Death of a Salesman’ for the British Council and his study of stage adaptations since 1980 will be published by Oberon on 2011. His plays are published by Methuen, Samuel French and Oberon. He is currently Deputy Director of East 15 Acting School at the University of Essex. › Researching the Method: Some Personal Strategies, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 147-159. Yoshiko Fukushima University of Hawai'i at Hilo, Department of Languages, Humanities Division, 200 W. Kawili Street, Hilo, HI 96720-4091, United States of America Keywords Japanese comedy, experimental performance, performance studies Yoshiko Fukushima is Chair of the Department of Languages at the University of Hawai’i at Hilo, where she is Associate Professor of Japanese Studies. Until 2009 she taught at the University of Oklahoma. She completed her Ph.D. in Performance Studies at Tisch School of the Arts, New York University in 2000. She is the author of Manga Discourse in Japanese Theatre: The Location of NodaHideki’s Yume no Yuminsha (Routledge: 2003). She is currently working on two booklength studies of a history of modern Japanese comedy and Japan’s experimental performance in the 1990s › Ambivalent mimicryin Enomoto Kenichi’swartime comedy:His revue and Blackface, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 21-37. George Gagneré Compagnie Incidents Mémorables, 20, rue Sadi Carnot, 93300 Aubervilliers, France Keywords computer graphics, augmented reality, digital scenography, cinema, new media George Gagneré received his Ph.D., which focused on the concept of artistic permanence in theatre production, at Paris III Sorbonne Nouvelle in 2001. In parallel, he collaborated with Stephan Braunschweig, Peter Stein and Giorgio Barberio Corsetti as Stage Directing Assistant in theater and opera. George Gagneré is the artistic director of the theater company Incidents Mémorables of which he directed the principal shows and performances since its foundation in 1999. His work is dedicated to the flexible exploration of relationships between performing and electronic arts. › Revisiting the layer/mask paradigm for augmented scenery, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 237-258. Melodie G Galloway University of North Carolina, Asheville, Department of Music, One University Heights, CPO 2290 Asheville, NC 28804, United States of America Keywords Stephen Sondheim, revue, Melodie G. Galloway holds a MA from Florida State University in Vocal Performance and a Doctor of Musical Arts degree in conducting from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Her experience as a conductor and soprano soloist includes opera, musical theatre and a professional vocal ensemble, for which she has been a soloist in Russia, Estonia, Ireland, England and Spain, and for former Presidents Bush and Clinton as part of the White House Christmas celebrations. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor in music: choral small-scale musical, intimate musical conductor and coordinator of Vocal Studies. She frequently appears as a clinician and conference contributor in the fields of musical theatre, choral repertoire and techniques, and jazz. As an invited speaker in March 2007, Galloway presented ‘Coloring Outside the Lines: Conflicts and Resolutions in Dave Brubeck’s “Jazzy” Mass’ as part of the Leeds College of Music International Jazz Conference ‘Jazz: Inside and Outside’. › Is less truly more? Exploring intimacy and design in small-scale musical theatre, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 103-111. Steve Garrett Cultural Concerns, Wales, 35 Beauchamp Street, Riverside, Cardiff, CF11 6AX, United Kingdom Keywords youth, community music, Welsh arts Steve Garrett has been involved with the practice and development of community music in Wales for many years, working in a variety of contexts. He is vice-chair (formerly chair) of the Wales Association of Community Artists, and was an Arts Council of Wales Council member from 2000 until 2004. Currently he runs Cultural Concerns, a freelance community arts consultancy based in Cardiff, working in areas of policy and practice relating to participatory arts activities that empower individuals and their communities. As well as devising and delivering a range of community-based participatory arts activities, he provides advice and training in community arts project management and cultural policy development. Steve also organizes regular international cultural exchange projects, is coordinator of the annual Riverside Festival, on the board of Cardiff's Chapter Arts Centre and a community reporter for BBC Radio Wales. › The role of community music in helping disadvantaged young people in South Wales to confront social exclusion, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 371-377. Serena Gaurracino University of Naples L’Orientale, Italy Keywords gender and cultural studies, film theory, performance studies, postcolonial literature Serena Guarracino holds a two-year research grant at the University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’, where she received her Ph.D. in ‘Literatures, Cultures, and Histories of Anglophone Countries’ in 2005. Her research interests encompass gender and cultural studies, film theory, performance studies and postcolonial literature, with a particular focus on the relationship between music and literature. She recently authored the book La primadonna all’opera. Scrittura e performance nel mondo anglofono (Trento: Tangram Edizioni Scientifiche, 2010), and is currently writing a book on contemporary rewritings of Traviata, Carmen and Madama Butterfly from a postcolonial perspective. She edited with Marina Vitale a double issue for the journal AION Anglistica titled ‘Music and the Performance of Identity’ (13.1–2, 2009). She is a member of the scientific board of the ‘Centro Archivio Donne’ (Women’s Studies Centre) at the University of Naples ‘L’Orientale’. › Beth Ditto and the Post- Feminist Masquerade; or How ‘Post’ can Post Punk Be?, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 111-122. Gabriella Giannachi University of Exeter, UK, The Queen's Dr, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4QJ, United Kingdom Keywords mixed reality performance, participation, interactivity, archiving, information architecture, metadata Gabriella Giannachi is Professor in Performance and New Media and Director of the Centre for Intermedia at the University of Exeter. Her book publications include Virtual Theatres (2004) and Politics of New Media Theatre (2007). She has published articles in Contemporary Theatre Review, Leonardo, Performance Research, TDR and and has developed conference papers for IVA 2009, CHI 2008 and CHI 2009. She is an investigator in the RCUK-funded Horizon Digital Economy Research Hub (2009–2014). › Riders Have Spoken: A practice-based approach to developing an information architecture for the archiving and replay of a mixed reality performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 209-223. Jools Gilson-Ellis University College Cork,, Department of English, O'Rahilly Building, Cork, Ireland Jools Gilson-Ellis is a writer, choreographer, performer and installation artist based in Ireland. She is co-director (with Richard Povall) of the performance production company half/angel, and teaches performance at University College Cork. She holds a practice-based Ph.D. in Theatre & Performance Studies from the University of Surrey. Keywords digital media, knitting, craft, art, women › Orienteering with double moss: The cartographies of half/angel's The Knitting Map, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 183-196. Dimple Godiwala Dimple Godiwala was educated at the Universities of Bombay and Oxford. She is the author of 'Breaking the Bounds: British Feminist Dramatists Writing in the Mainstream since c. 1980' (Peter Lang), and has written in the field of cultural, feminist, dramatic and postcolonial theory. Her critical anthology 'Alternatives Within the Mainstream: Keywords empire, patriarchy, gender studies, sexuality, Britain, twentiethcentury, Bourdieu, Foucault, race British Black and Asian Theatre' will be published by Cambridge Scholars Press in 2006. She is currently compiling 'Alternatives Within the Mainstream II: Postwar Queer British Theatres'. › ‘The performativity of the dramatic text’: domestic colonialism and Caryl Churchill’s Cloud Nine, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.1, 5-22. › Editorial Introduction, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.1, 3-12. › Genealogies, archaeologies, histories: the revolutionary 'interculturalism' of Asian theatre in Britain, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.1, 33-48. › : providing a forum for British-Asian women playwrights, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.1, 69-84. › Scripts to performances: a bibliographical essay on the production history of Cloud Nine, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.2, 161-. Sarah Goldingay University of Exeter, Drama, The Queen's Dr, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4QJ, United Kingdom Keywords religion, spirituality, performance, theatre, drama, Howard Barker Dr. Sarah Goldingay is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter. Her main research interests lie in the practice of culture, religion and spirituality and its performance in contemporary British Society. Recent publications have focused on the performance of multiple states of consciousness by trance mediums in a series of UK séances and the role of the audience at performances of stage mediums. She continues to work as a researcher on the interdisciplinary Ian Ramsey Pilgrimage project at Oxford University. Forthcoming publications from this project will use both quantitative and qualitative data to consider the experience and motivations of 600 pilgrims at five international sites: Stonehenge, Glastonbury, Lourdes, Fatima and Santiago de Campostella. Next year she will begin working on a project examining the performance of pain. She continues to work as a performance practitioner. › Plagiarising theory: performance and religion?*, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 5-14. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 361-371. Lizbeth Goodman SMARTlab Digital Media Institut, Unversity of East London, 4-6 University Way, London, E16 2RD, United Kingdom Keywords play, replay, presentation, Lizbeth Goodman is Chair in Creative Technology Innovation at the University of East London, where she is also founder and Director of the SMARTlab Digital Media Institute and the MAGIC Multimedia & Games Innovation Centre. She is also Director of Studies for the UEL practice-based Ph.D. programme in Performance & Digital Media. Lizbeth has been appointed Professor of Inclusive Design for Education/Chair of Creative Technology Innovation and Executive of the Innovation Academy at SMARTlab’s new main base in Ireland at re-presentation, self University College Dublin. She will also continue to supervise and direct the Ph.D. programme in London and to direct the development of other new sites soon to open in Seattle at the University of Washington, and in Toronto. › Editorial: Performing and Being (There) live and online, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 97-100. › Introduction Part 1: Performance futures: Bodies in movement, viewed through multiple screens, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 101-102. › Performing self beyond the body: Replay culture replayed, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 103-122. › Introduction Part 2: First, second and third spaces: Digital narratives and the spaces of performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 167-168. Paul Granjon UWIC, Media Arts and Performance, School of Art and Design, Howard Gardens, Cardiff, United Kingdom Keywords performance, HCI, evolution, art Paul Granjon is a visual artist living in Cardiff who has exhibited selfmade machines since 1996. He teaches media art and performance in UWIC, Cardiff. He was one of the artists representing Wales at the Venice Biennale 2005. He works with electronics, robotics, video and computer programming. His subject matter is the evolution of the relation and respective status of human and machine. He applies a playful, hands-on approach to the production of machines for video films, installations and performances. The presentation of his work often comprises humorous elements, combined with a darker vision. The work, which comments on the effects of exposure to an increasingly technological and complex environment, feeds on Paul Granjon's ambiguous feelings of concern and attraction towards the effects of progress. › Performing with machines and machines that perform, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 45-57. Gill Greaves York Teaching Hospital, Wigginton Road, York, YO31 8HE, United Kingdom Gill Greaves is the Art and Design Officer for York Teaching Hospital, where she works with patients producing art as a form of distraction and therapy. She also arranges for local musicians to come and play to the patients. Keywords art and design, art therapy › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Debbie Green University of London, Central School of Speech and Drama, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords power, dyskinesia, text, photography, theatre, voice Debbie Green is a part-time senior lecturer in Movement for Actors on the BA (Hons) Acting Pathway at the Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London. She also teaches on the MA Voice Studies course and is author of: 2009, ‘Integrated Movement Practices and Breath’, in Breath in Action, ed. J. Boston and R. Cook London: Jessica Kingsley. › Dance with time: Movement, when all is said and done, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 205-213. Stephen Greer University of Wales Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies, Parry-Williams Building, Penglais Campus, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Stephen Greer is lecturer in Drama, Theatre and Performance at Aberystwyth University. His research focuses on the intersection of queer theory and contemporary performance practice, with particular interest in notions of identity and community in collaborative and interactive works; he is currently developing a monograph on contemporary British queer performance. He has a background in improvisation, and is Associate Producer for the theatre and radio comedy group, The Penny Dreadfuls. Keywords queer theory, interactive works, queer performance › Collaborative performance and asynchronous action: World Without Oil's fragmented forum, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 61-76. Sean Gregory Guildhall School of Music & Drama, The Barbican Centre, Silk Street, London, EC2Y 8DT, United Kingdom Keywords collaboration, facilitation, conservatoire Sean Gregory, M.Phil BA (Hons.) FGS LGSM (PCS), works as a composer, performer and creative producer throughout the United Kingdom and overseas. He leads collaborative arts projects for all ages and abilities in association with many British and international orchestras, opera companies, theatres, galleries and arts/education organizations. His commissions range from chamber works to largescale collaborations in the community and include performances in a huge range of contexts and venues at local, national and international levels. Sean is Director of Creative Learning for the Barbican Centre and Guildhall School of Music & Drama. This post, incorporating Barbican Education and Guildhall Connect, has been recently established to develop and deliver a range of world-class creative learning programmes involving music, theatre, visual arts, cinema, dance and literature across the Barbican Centre and Guildhall School, in close collaboration with the London Symphony Orchestra, resident and associate companies and relevant partners. › Collaborative approaches: Putting colour in a grey area, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 387-397. Yvonne Griggs De Montfort University, English Dept, Clephan Building, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords King Lear, adaptation, intertextuality, genre, Festen, The King is Alive, Shakespeare Dr. Yvonne Griggs is a lecturer in English at De Montfort University. Her research interests include literary adaptations to screen, Shakespeare on screen, adaptation theory and screenplay writing. She has recently published a book entitled Screen Adaptations: Shakespeare’s King Lear (Methuen), and formerly worked as Editorial Assistant for the British Shakespeare Association’s academic journal, Shakespeare. Her teaching interests include literary adaptations, Shakespeare, screenplay writing and adaptation theory. › Ran: Chaos on the ‘Western’ Frontier, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 103-116. › Dogmatic Shakespeare: a ‘recognition of ghostly presences’ in Thomas Vinterberg's Festen and Kristian Levring's The King is Alive, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 109-119. Marco Grosoli University of Bologna, Via Zamboni, 33, 40126 Bologna, Italy Keywords Rohmer, Bazin, cinema, mixed media, ontology, space Marco Grosoli was awarded a Ph.D. in Film Studies (University of Bologna), for a dissertation concerning the integral corpus of writings (2600 articles) by André Bazin. His other research interests are French criticism, French New Wave, film theory and media studies. His essays also appeared in Fata Morgana, zizekstudies.org and on several edited collections (among others, about Korean cinema and Paul Schrader). As a film critic, he regularly contributes to Italian film periodicals such as Cinergie, La Furia Umana and Sentieri Selvaggi. › Rohmer's Les amours d'Astre et de Celadon as a systematical synthesis for Bazin's space-based adaptation theory, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 115-127. Sue Hacking University of Central Lancashire, School of Health, Preston, Lancashire, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Sue Hacking works for the School of Health, University of Central Lancashire. Her current research topics include the impact of visual and creative methodologies in social science research. She is also interested in the evaluation and knowledge transfer potential for prevention science through community based and distractive interventions. Keywords social science, mental health, distractive interventions › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. Rami Haddad University of Jordan, Music Department, Amman, 11942, Jordan Keywords music, technology, Nay, Shabbaba Dr. Rami Haddad is Vice-Dean of the Faculty of Arts & Design and a lecturer at the University of Jordan. He completed a Bachelors in Musicology at the University of Yarmouk, a MA in Educational Administration at the University of Jordan and a Ph.D. in Music Education at the University of Meunster, Germany. He has published several papers in musicology, music education, music therapy, and ethnomusicology. In addition he has translated a book entitled Kodály’s Principles in Practice, An Approach to Music Education through the Kodály Method. › Educational tools based on MIR system for Arabian woodwinds, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 31-46. Markos Hadjioannou King's College London, Film Studies Department, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS, United Kingdom Keywords new media, digital arts, ontology, intermediality, spectatorship, Nietzschean ethics, contemporary arts, cinema, film theory Markos Hadjioannou is a part-time lecturer in Film Studies at King's College London. His research interests include cinema technologies, especially the relationship between celluloid and digital cinema; contemporary film theory; and continental philosophy, especially poststructuralism and Nietzschean ethics. › In between stage and screen: The intermedial in Katie Mitchell's some trace of her, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 43-59. Cordelia V. Hall The University of Glasgow, Department of Computing Science, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom Cordelia V. Hall works in the Computer Science Department at the University of Glasgow. Here her research topics include discrete mathematics, studies of program constructs and functional programming. › Calibrating a bowing checkerfor violin students, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 125-139. Keywords computer science, music education, violin students Richard J. Hand University of Glamorgan, Department of Drama and Music, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Atrium, 86-88 Adam Street, Cardiff, Wales, CF24 2XF, United Kingdom Richard J. Hand is Professor in Theatre and Media Drama at the University of Glamorgan, Wales. He is the author of The Theatre of Joseph Conrad: Reconstructed Fictions (Palgrave 2005) and Terror on the Air: Horror Radio in America (McFarland 2006) and has a particular interest in interdisciplinarity and adaptation within the performing arts and media. Research interests include Adaptation, Horror Studies, European Theatre, Radio Drama and Popular Culture. Keywords Frank Zappa, music, theatre, narrative, composition › Frank Zappa and musical theatre:ugly ugly o’phan Annie and really deep, intense, thought-provoking Broadway symbolism, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 41-56. › Staging an 'unbearable spectacle': Joseph Conrad's Laughing Anne, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.2, 109-117. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 83-85. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 173-175. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 91-93. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 197-199. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 3-4. Steffen Hantke Sogang University, Department of English, CPO Box 1142, Seoul, 100611, Korea Sout Steffen Hantke teaches in the English Department at Sogang University, Seoul, and has a particular interest in horror studies and adaptation. › How to adapt to heterodoxy: A story from the intercultural classroom, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 93-102. Keywords horror studies, adaptation Benjamin J. Harbert University of California, Department of Ethnomusicology, Schoenberg Music Building, Box 951657, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1657, United States of America Keywords Louisiana, transcendence, gospel, jazz, R&B Ben Harbert is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of California, Los Angeles and received a Bachelor of Arts in music and anthropology from Wesleyan University. He has examined topics including Egyptian extreme metal, American prison music, seventeenth century musical exploration in the Near East, the Spanish nationalist avant-garde and the mathematical principles of Indian rhythms. In 1997, Harbert was awarded the Thomas J. Watson Fellowship for a year-long study in Egypt, India and Spain. At Chicago’s Old Town School of Folk Music, he developed and directed a comprehensive World Music Department and acted on the Education Committee for the Chicago World Music Festival. He is currently an Artist in Residence at the Los Angeles Music Center as an American music specialist. He is writing his Ph.D. dissertation on music in Louisiana prisons at the University of California, Los Angeles. › I'll keep on living after I die: Musical manipulation and transcendence at Louisiana State Penitentiary, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 65-76. Graeme Harper Oakland University, Director, The Honors College, Vandenberg Hall, Oakland University, MI 48309, USA Keywords Welsh culture, nationalism, performance, Wales, Australia, ontology Professor Graeme Harper is Associate Editor of the Creative Industries Journal. Now Director of the Honors College at Oakland University, Michigan, he has worked at universities in the United States, Australia and the United Kingdom, where he established the National Institute for Excellence in the Creative Industries. He remains an Honorary Professor in the UK. Also a Professor of Creative Writing, he has published creative and critical work, including On Creative Writing (MLM, 2010), Moon Dance (Parlor, 2010) and Sound and Music in Film and the Visual Media: A Critical Overview (Continuum, 2009). › Editorials, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.3, 147-150. › Keeping up with the Joneses: an inside out/upside down view of performance in Wales, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.3, 193-204. Anna Harpin University of Exeter, Department of Drama, College of Humanities, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Anna Harpin is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter, as well as a writer and director with the theatre company Idiot Child. Recent publications include ‘Marginal Experiments: Peter Brook and Stepping Out Theatre Company’ (2010) and ‘Intolerable Acts’ (2011). Her research interests include health, medicine, philosophy and ethics, trauma and stand-up comedy. Keywords ecology, folklore, heritage, politics, state of the nation, tragedy › Land of hope and glory: Jez Butterworth's tragic landscapes, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 61-73. Geraldine Harris Lancaster University, Department of Theatre Studies, The Roundhouse, Lancaster, Lancashire, LA1 4YW, United Kingdom Geraldine Harris teaches in the Department of Theatre Studies at the University of Lancaster. Gerry's move into focusing on the politics of subjectivity and identity in contemporary theatre and performance was reflected in articles for The Contemporary Theatre Review, New Theatre Quarterly and Studies in Theatre Production and in her 1999 monograph Staging Feminities Performance and Performativity Keywords The Medead, Medea, disrupted language, performance, deconstruction, intertextuality (Manchester University Press), which considers performances by Rose English, Bobby Baker and Annie Sprinkle. This was followed by a period of consolidating her research into the aesthetics and politics of television drama, which resulted in her monograph Beyond Representation: Television Drama and the Politics and Aesthetics of Identity (Manchester University Press, 2006). › Foreshadowings and after blows: Fiona Templeton's The Medead (in progress), Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.3, 165-178. James Harris United Kingdom Keywords England, Canetti, Anglophilia, satire, caricatures James Harris is a writer and translator resident in Berlin. He is the Associate Editor of Comedy Studies and has published work in he May Anthologies, The Liberal and Bordercrossing Berlin, and his novella ‘The Comedy of Maria’ was published by Cerise Press in Summer 2010. › Mutual intelligibility: depictions of England in German literature and thought, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 61-69. › Editorial, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 139-140. › Reviews, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 219-223. Gillian Harrison Artsupport Australia, Australia Council for the Arts, Level 1, 9–11 Cavenagh Street, Darwin, NT 0801, Australia Keywords history, Australia, community, music Gillian Harrison has worked as a musician, music teacher, teacher of English as a second language and a TAFE college lecturer. She has also worked as a Community Music Officer in Footscray and as the National Art and Working Life Music Officer with the ACTU. Gillian has worked with Aboriginal musicians in training and skills development programmes since moving to the Northern Territory in 1993 and was Manager of CAAMA Music, the Aboriginal recording studio and label in Alice Springs. She is currently the Northern Territory Manager for Artsupport Australia, an initiative of the Australia Council for the Arts to grow cultural philanthropy. › Community music in Australia, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 337-342. Peter Harrop Professor Peter Harrop teaches performance studies in the Performing University of Chester, Berth Ddu, The Firs, Rhosesmor, Flintshire, CH7 6PJ, United Kingdom Arts Department of the University of Chester where he is currently ProVice Chancellor. He previously taught at Bretton Hall College and Addis Ababa University. He is interested in performance anthropology, most particularly traditions of mumming, ceremonial activity more broadly, and the intersection of time and place in the performance of culture. Keywords embodiment, pedagogy, performance, theatre, writing › What's in a name?, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 189-200. LaResse Harvey A Better Way Foundation, PO Box 942, Hartford, CT 06101, United States of America Keywords creativity, music, drama, art LaResse Harvey is A Better Way Foundation’s African American Policy Director. She is a formerly incarcerated single mother with over ten years experience in community activism on issues of a woman’s right to choose, housing, re-entry, drug treatment and custodial parental rights. She holds a Baccalaureate Degree in Social Work from Saint Joseph College in West Hartford and several Associate Degrees: Human Services, Liberal Arts & Science, and General Studies. Currently she is working on her MA at Post University in Waterbury. She has conducted strategy caucuses at University of Connecticut School of Social Work using 'The Arts' as a tool to reduce recidivism and Undoing Racism training at Saint Joseph College with future educators. › Creativity inside and outside prison walls: A journey of inspiration, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 129-132. Sue Hawksley Northern School of Contemporary Dance, 98 Chapeltown Road, LS7 4BH, United Kingdom Keywords choreography, dance, somatics, installation, interactivity, live art Sue Hawksley is a dancer and choreographer who has worked with companies such as Rambert Dance Company, Mantis and cie. Philippe Genty, with choreographers such as Richard Alston, Siobhan Davies, Merce Cunningham and Trisha Brown and with artists such as Derek Jarman, Bruce McLean and Simon Biggs. She is currently lecturer in Contemporary Dance at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance, Leeds. › Memory maps in interactive dance environments, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 123-138. C. Michael Hawn Southern Methodist University, Perkins School of Theology, SMU Box 750133, Dallas, TX, 75275-0133, United States of America Keywords music, song, religion, oral tradition, prayer, Christianity C. Michael Hawn is Professor of Church Music and Director of the Sacred Music Program at Perkins School of Theology, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, Texas. He is the author of two books on cross-cultural liturgy and global congregational song: One Bread, One Body: Exploring Cultural Diversity in Worship (2003) and Gather into One: Praying and Singing Globally (2003). More recently, he was the music director for the IX Assembly of the World Council of Churches in Porto Alegre, Brazil (2006) and was elected Fellow of the Hymn Society in the United States and Canada (2008) for research and leadership of global Christian song in liturgy. › Christian song in a global church: The role of musical structure in community formation, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 5770. Casey J. Hayes Hewitt School, Creative Arts Department Chair, 45 East 75th Street, New York City, New York, NY 10021, United States of America Keywords community music, equal rights, homosexuality, gender studies, sexuality, chorus, social justice Casey J. Hayes is co-music director of the New York City Gay Men’s Chorus and Chairman of the Creative Arts Department at the Hewitt School, New York City. He is a Ph.D. candidate in Music Education at New York University. Prior to his arrival in New York City, Casey was both the Assistant Conductor and Principal Accompanist for the Indianapolis Men’s Chorus. Casey began playing the piano at age 7 under legendary teachers Armilla Zix Wilson and Edgar Roberts of The Juilliard School. He has Undergraduate and Graduate Degrees in Music Education and Choral Conducting from Butler University, where he studied with acclaimed choral conductor Henry Leck and composer/arranger James Quitman Mulholland. Casey is an ABD doctoral candidate in Music Education at New York University’s Steinhardt School of Education, where he specializes in the study of Educational Outreach within Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual/Transgender choruses. › Community music and the GLBT chorus, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 63-68. › Book Review, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 267-268. Karen Hayes Keywords › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. RAND T. HAZOU Keywords Rand Hazou studied at the University of Queensland and La Trobe University. In 2004 he was commissioned by the UNDP to travel to the Occupied Territories in Palestine to work as a theatre consultant running workshops for Palestinian youth. In 2009 he was awarded a Ph.D. in Theatre and Drama at La Trobe University. His thesis examined the latest wave of political theatre in Australia engaging with asylum seekers and refugees. › Hypermediacy and credibility in documentary theatre: The craft of makebelieve in Théâtre du Soleil’s Le Dernier Caravansérail (2005), Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 293-304. Rand Hazou La Trobe University, Theatre and Drama Program, Bundoora Campus, Melbourne, 3086, Australia Keywords Australia, asylum seekers, refugees, theatre, drama Rand Hazou completed a Bachelor of Arts in Geography, Media Studies and Drama at the University of Queensland in 1998. In 2003 he was awarded First Class Honours in Theatre and Drama at La Trobe University. In 2004 Rand was commissioned by the UNDP to travel to the Occupied Territories in Palestine to work as a theatre consultant running workshops for Palestinian youths. In 2009 Rand was awarded a Ph.D. in Theatre and Drama at La Trobe University. His thesis examined the latest wave of political theatre in Australia dealing with asylum seekers and refugees. › Dys-appearance andcompassion: The body,pain and ethical enactmentsin Mike Parr’s Close theConcentration Camps (2002), Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 153-166. Andrew Head University of Hull, School of Arts & New Media, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Keywords Krapp’s Last Tape, film, disability, technology, media studies Andrew Head is a lecturer in Theatre Studies at the Scarborough campus of the University of Hull. He has directed and performed in several of Beckett’s shorter pieces in Britain and abroad. Andrew has research and teaching interests in the work of Samuel Beckett; theories of audience response and the theatre event and twentieth century political theatre. He teaches across the BA curricula in Theatre and Performance with specific interests in critical practice; acting and live/performance art practices; site-specific performance and Beckett in Performance. He is investigating the possibility of locating Beckett’s later dramatic works amidst the context of contemporary performance practice enriched with the emerging traditions of performance art, live art and intermedial performance and a body of theoretical discourse which has sought to articulate these developing art forms in the years since Beckett’s death. › ‘... I wouldn’t want them back.’ Issues of process and technology in a recent production of Krapp’s Last Tape, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 47-54. Garry Headland Institution St Joseph, British International Section, 13 Rue du Drapeau, Le Havre, Seine Maritime, 76620, France Keywords stage business, set piece, visual comedy, verbal comedy, physical comedy After a ten-year period spent in the printing industry, Garry Headland moved on to complete a degree in French at the University of Sheffield in 1983 and subsequently went on to teach and study in France. He completed his doctorate on the work of the Anglo-Irish dramatist and lawyer, Arthur Murphy, in 2007 at Bordeaux University. His interest in live theatre began with amateur dramatics in England in his home town of Nottingham as well as performance in the Drama Studio at Sheffield University. After taking up residence in France he followed actor training in Rouen then Bordeaux and finally Le Havre where he became involved in improvisation theatre. He currently teaches English Literature to students aged 11-18 in the British International Section of St Joseph's Institute in Le Havre where his interest in live theatre involves writing short plays for children as well as adaptations of Shakespeare for older students. › Arthur Murphy and eighteenth-century stage business, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 23-38. David G. Hebert Bergen University College, Grieg Academy, Faculty of Education, P.O. Box 7030, Bergen, N-5020, Norway Keywords Tonga, New Zealand, youth, Polynesia, Japan, cultural translation, education, sociology, ethnic studies, art, research, globalization David G. Hebert (Ph.D., University of Washington) is Assistant Professor of Music at Boston University, where he directs doctoral dissertations and teaches graduate courses in research methods, sociology/psychology of music education and an ethnomusicology seminar. He previously taught for leading universities in Russia, Japan and New Zealand, and his scholarly publications appear in a dozen different peer-reviewed journals. His book Wind Bands and Cultural Identity in Japanese Schools (Springer) describes the world’s largest music competition. › Music transmission in an Auckland Tongan community youth band, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 169-188. Dee Heddon Deirdre (Dee) Heddon is a Reader in Theatre Studies at the University of Glasgow. She has published widely on autobiographical University of Glasgow, Department of Theatre, Film & TV Studies, Gilmorehill Centre, 9 University Avenue, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom performance in various journals and collections and is the author of Autobiography and Performance (Palgrave 2008) and co-author of Devising Performance: A Critical History (Palgrave, 2005). Dee is also the co-author of Walking, Writing and Performance: Autobiographical Texts, Phil Smith, Carl Lavery and Deirdre Heddon, ed. Roberta Mock, Bristol: Intellect, 2009. Keywords autobiography, performance, theatre › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 201-. Eric T. Hetzler University of Huddersfield, Department of Drama, Queensgate, Huddersfield, HD13DH, United Kingdom Keywords acting, emotion in performance, the actor's experience, acting theory Eric T. Hetzler is completing a Ph.D. in England, after receiving his BA in Performance from the University of Wisconsin-Madison and his MFA in the same subject from the University of Georgia. He is a professional actor, director and former Executive/Artistic Director of the Central Minnesota Children's Theatre. › Actors and emotion in performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 59-78. Dr. Eric Hetzler University of Huddersfield › REVIEWS, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 351-354. Keywords Allan Hewitt University of Strathclyde, Department of Sport, Culture and the Arts, Tom Bone Building, 76 Southbrae Drive, Glasgow, G13 1PP, United Kingdom Dr. Allan Hewitt is Head of Department of Sport, Culture and the Arts at the University of Strathclyde, Glasgow. He teaches across a range of undergraduate music and Music Education programmes and is an active performer and composer. Current research is in the area of musical participation and wellbeing. Keywords music, technology, composition, childhood, creativity, software › Some features of children's composing in a computer-based environment: the influence of age, task familiarity and formal instrumental music instruction, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 5-24. Lee Higgins Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, Mount Street, Liverpool, United Kingdom Keywords community, music, communication, history, animatuer, definitions Lee Higgins leads the integrated arts postgraduate programme and the undergraduate community arts provision at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, UK. He is the current chair of the International Society of Music Education’s (ISME) commission for Community Music Activity and joint editor of the International Journal of Community Music. As a community musician he has worked across the education sector as well as within health settings, prison and probation service, youth and community, and orchestra outreach. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 3-4. › Growth, pathways and groundwork:Community music in the United Kingdom, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 23-38. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 139-141. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 297-298. › Community music and the welcome, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 391-400. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 105-107. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 161-164. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 311-315. › EDITORIAL, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 75-77. Jessica Hillman SUNY Freedonia, Department of Theatre and Dance, 209 Rockefeller Arts Center, Fredonia, NY, 14063, United States of America Keywords authenticity, David Leveaux, ethnic studies, Fiddler on the Roof, musical theatre Dr. Jessica Hillman teaches Musical Theatre Styles, Musical Theatre History, Script Analysis, Acting, and Audition Techniques at SUNY Fredonia. An Actors' Equity Association member, she has performed professionally on tour, in regional theatres across the country, and in new musicals in NYC. Her acting credits include Tess in the 2001 national tour of Crazy for You, and lead roles in Fiddler on the Roof, Cinderella and The Last Five Years. She has directed and/or choreographed musicals and plays at University of Colorado, University of Denver, the Colorado Shakespeare Festival, Colorado Light Opera and the Fort Salem Theatre. She received her BA degree in Theatre History from Cornell University and her MA and Ph.D. from University of Colorado at Boulder, where she was the recipient of the Chancellor’s and Devaney Fellowships. › Goyim on the roof: embodying authenticity in Leveaux’s Fiddler on the Roof, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 25-40. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 219-226. Evangelos Himonides Institute of Education, University of London, 20 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AL, United Kingdom Keywords song, psychoacoustics, quality perception, music, education, chorus Evangelos Himonides holds the University of London’s first ever ‘lecturer in Music Technology Education’ position. His teaching centres on music education, psychology and perception, music technology and information technology, at post-graduate level, at the Institute of Education, University of London. He also leads the postgraduate course ‘Music Technology in Education’. He holds a Music Diploma from the Macedonian Conservatoire of Thessaloniki, Greece, a Bachelors of Science in Information Technology (Multimedia) with Star First Class Honours from Middlesex University, UK, a Masters in Education with distinction from the University of Surrey, UK and a Ph.D. in Psychoacoustics and Information Technology from the University of London. He is a Chartered I.T. professional with the British Computer Society. Evangelos has had an ongoing career in experimental research in the fields of psychoacoustics, music perception, music cognition, information technology, human-computer interaction, special needs, the singing voice and singing development. › Mapping a beautiful voice: theoretical considerations, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 25-54. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 81-84. › Mapping a beautiful voice: The continuous response measurement apparatus (CReMA), Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 5-25. Claire Hind York St John University, Faculty of Arts, Lord Mayors Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords dark play, games, adaptation, performance, writing, adaptation Claire Hind is a senior lecturer at York St John University where she specializes in conceptual performance practice, the ensemble and performance writing. She has a Ph.D. in practice led research from the University of Leeds and was supervised by Professor Mick Wallis and Dr. Anna Fenemore. Her work investigates the playful, ironic and psychoanalytical processes of making live and mediated performance within enclosed intimate spaces and works through the attitudes, encounters repetitions and drives of rehearsal. Claire has directed performance workshops in St. Petersburg, developed for over nine years cross-cultural performance projects at the Sibiu International Theatre Festival Romania, has worked frequently in the United States as an artist and lecturer and most recently co-curated the international Writing Encounters symposium at York St John University. › Hotel Two Rooms: The practice of adaptation, projection and play in performance, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 71-88. Eri Hirabayashi Japan Keywords ritual, practice theory, identity, Japan, community, music Eri Hirabayashi earned her Ph.D. from the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick, Ireland, in 2010. In addition, she was the acting course director of the MA Ritual Chant and Song programme and lecturer (Ritual Studies) from 2009 to 2010 at the above university. The focus of her research is the function and impact of ritual music and music performance – particularly that of Shinto music – on group behaviour in modern Japan. › Identity, roles and practice in ritual music, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 39-55. Hilda Ho Murray Royal Hospital, Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Muirhall Road, Perth, PH2 7BH, United Kingdom Keywords mentally disordered offenders, forensic psychiatry, mental health, creativity, drama, theatre Dr. Hilda Ho, MBChB, MRCPsych, MPhil, is the Regional Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist for the north of Scotland. Her current post involves the planning of a new medium-secure unit for the north of Scotland. Dr. Hilda won the RCPsych in Scotland Research Prize 2010 with her paper 'Violence risk assessment: the use of the PCL-SV, HCR20 and VRAG to predict violence in mentally disordered offenders discharged from a medium secure unit in Scotland'. She was presented with her prize by the Chairman of the RCPsych in Scotland, Dr. Peter Rice at the Apex Hotel, Edinburgh. › A descriptive analysis of a pilot drama project in a forensic psychiatric setting, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 267-280. Alison Hodge Royal Holloway, University of London, Department of Drama and Theatre, Egham Hill, Egham, TW20 0EX, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, actor training, performance research Alison Hodge is a freelance theatre director and Reader in Theatre Practice in the Department of Drama and Theatre at Royal Holloway College, University of London. She is the contributing editor of Twentieth Century Actor Training (Routledge, 2000) second edition Actor Training (Routledge 2010) and co-authored with Wlodzimierz Staniewski Hidden Territories: The Theatre of Gardzienice (Routledge, 2004). She was a founder and co-artistic director of Theatre Alibi and is currently the Artistic Director of The Quick and the Dead, an international performance research company (DVD: Core Training: the development of core training and performance (Arts Archives, 2007). › Actor Training, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.3, 184-187. Ceri Hovland University of Reading, Department of Film, Theatre and Television, Bulmershe Court, Woodlands Avenue, Reading, RG6 1HY, United Kingdom Ceri Hovland is a final year Ph.D. student in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading. Her thesis explores the role of performance in film within mise-en-scène and strategies of narration through epistemological framing and close textual analysis. › We felt that if we kept looking hard enough, we might begin to understand how they were feeling and who they were: Point of view and performance in The Virgin Suicides, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 259-270. Keywords Sofia Coppola, The Virgin Suicides, point of view, performance, photography, adaptation Gillian Howell The University of Melbourne, Australia, The Provost, Victoria 3010, Australia Keywords Australian Art Orchestra, creative education, original music Gillian Howell is a Melbourne-based musician and director of music collaborations and compositions, who works with diverse groups to devise and perform original music. Her work takes her to arts organizations and community groups throughout Australia and overseas, including the Melbourne Symphony and Australia Chamber Orchestras, the Song Room, the Australian Art Orchestra and Musica Viva, and most recently as a 2010 Asialink artist-in-residence in East Timor. She teaches at the University of Melbourne's Graduate School of Education in the Artistic and Creative Education cluster, and is Program Director of the Australian National Academy of Music's Outreach and Community Program. › Do they know they're composing': Music making and understanding among newly arrived immigrant and refugee children, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 47-58. Polly Hudson University of Coventry, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords somatic practices, Skinner Releasing Technique, moving-image works Polly Hudson is a dancer, artist and teacher whose work is deeply informed by somatic practices. Polly makes performance and movingimage works, often combining the two. She has shown numerous works nationally and internationally, most recently the dance film Multiple Body: A Continent of Skin which travelled to the Ismeta Festival in New York, to Brighton International Screen Dance Festival and to Lisbon Video Danz Festival. Polly is a senior lecturer in Dance at Coventry University where she teaches MA and BA, and a visiting lecturer at Birmingham School of Acting. Polly is currently training to be a certified teacher of the Skinner Releasing Technique. › Somatic Approaches Applied to Artistic Movement in Technical Training: Somatic Approaches and the Arts, by Reserche en Mouvement. Three DVDs, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 263-265. Dorinda Hulton University of Exeter, Drama Department, Arts, Languages and Literature, New North Road, Thornlea, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Dorinda Hulton is a part-time senior lecturer in Drama at Exeter and a freelance director and dramaturg. Recent publications include ‘Joseph Chaikin’ in Actor Training (Routledge 2009), ‘Sites of Micro-political Theatre’ (PAJ 2009), DVD-ROM (Open University 2009) and ‘Towards a “New Aesthetic” for Creating Theatre in a Conflict Zone’ (European Off Network 2009). Keywords Cyprus, site, dramaturgy, reading imagery, Verfremdungseffekt, schizophrenia › The One Square Foot project, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 155-168. › Joseph Chaikin: The Presence of the Actor, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 219-224. Nick Hunt Rose Bruford College of Theatre and Performance, School of Design, Management and Technical Arts, Rose Bruford College of Theatre and Performance, Lamorby Park Sidcup, Sidcup, DA15 9DF, UK Keywords theatre lighting, performance making, technical arts Nick Hunt graduated with a degree in mechanical engineering before deciding that theatre was more interesting than thermodynamics. After ten years as a professional lighting technician and designer, he started teaching at Rose Bruford College, where – some fifteen years later – he is currently Head of the School of Design, Management and Technical Arts. Nick is close to completing his doctoral thesis, ‘Repositioning the Role of the Lighting Artist in Live Theatre Performance’, which examines the performative potential of light and the lighting artist. Nick’s other research interests include digital scenography and digital performance, the history of theatre lighting and the roles and status of the various personnel involved in theatre-making. › Alternative materialities: Scenography in digital performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 3-6. › Lighting on the hyperbolic plane: Towards a new approach to controlling light on the theatre stage, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 205-220. › REVIEWS, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 259-267. Leon Hunt Brunel University, Film & Television Studies, Brunel University, Uxbridge, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords Thai cinema, martial arts, Leon Hunt is a senior lecturer in Film and Television Studies at Brunel University. He is the author of British Low Culture: From Safari Suits to Sexploitation (Routledge 1998), Kung Fu Cult Masters: From Bruce Lee to Crouching Tiger (Wallflower Press 2003/Peking University Press 2010), and the BFI TV Classics volume on The League of Gentlemen (BFI/Palgrave Macmillan 2008), and co-editor of East Asian Cinemas: Exploring Transnational Connections on Film (I.B. Tauris 2008). He is currently writing a book on cult British comedy for real Manchester University Press. › Near the knuckle? It nearly took my arm off! British comedy and the new offensiveness, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 181-190. Mark Hutchings University of Reading, Department of English Language and Literature, Whiteknights, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6UR, United Kingdom Mark Hutchings teaches in the Department of English Language and Literature at the University of Reading. His main research interests lie in early modern drama in performance, Anglo-Spanish relations and theatre history. He is co-author (with A.A. Bromham) of Middleton and His Collaborators (Plymouth, 2008) and editor of Three Jacobean ‘Turkish’ Plays (Manchester University Press, forthcoming Keywords indoor playhouse, interval, The Changeling, Middleton’s politics, Spain, stage directions › De Flores between the acts, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 95111. Kimberley Hutt London Metropolitan University, 166–220 Holloway Road, London, N7 8DB, United Kingdom Kimberley Hutt, BSc, PGCE, MSST, is the course leader for BSc (Hons) Sports and Dance Therapy and senior lecturer in Sports Therapy at London Metropolitan University. She is currently studying MSc. Dance Science at Laban, London. › Corrective alignment and injury prevention strategies: Science, somatics or both?, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 251-263. Keywords dance therapy, dance science, sports therapy Elke Huwiler University of Amsterdam, Department of German Literature, Spuistraat 210, NL-1012 VT Amsterdam, Netherlands Keywords analytical model, narratology, semiotics, German ‘Hörspiel’, sound art Elke Huwiler is an assistant Professor in the Department of German Literature at the University of Amsterdam. She also teaches in the Department of Literary Studies and Media and Culture. She wrote her dissertation on Radio Drama and is currently doing research in the field of Historical Performance Studies. › Radio drama adaptations: An approach towards an analytical methodology, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 129-140. Valentina Iadeluca Centro Didattico Musicale, Via delle Egadi, 42 – 00141 Roma, Italy Keywords well-being, inclusion, music education, anthropological approach, Orff-Schulwerk Valentina Iadeluca is an interpreter of modern music and a jazz singer. She graduated in ancient literature and management for the cultural and communication sector. She runs teacher training courses in Italy and abroad in early childhood music education, voice training for children, interdisciplinary projects in schools and planning of music activities. On behalf of the Commune of Rome, she is author and responsible for the project 'Children in the Centre': a system of educational services in the music and play area. She is currently director and music teacher of the CDM Centro Didattico Musicale in Rome. › Bambini al Centro: Music as a means to promote wellbeing. Birth and configuration of an experience, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 311-318. Martin Iddon University of Leeds, School of Music, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary arts, musicology, composition Martin Iddon is a musicologist and composer. He studied musicology and composition at the Universities of Durham and Cambridge with John Butt and Ian Cross (musicology) as well as Robin Holloway and Fabrice Fitch (composition), and has studied composition privately with Chaya Czernowin, Steven Kazuo Takasugi, Ole Lützow-Holm, and Steve Martland. His articles have been published in journals such as Musical Quarterly, Twentieth century Music, and Contemporary Music Review. His music has been performed in Great Britain, Germany, Canada, Spain, Italy and the USA, and has been shortlisted by the Sound & Music. He currently lectures at the University of Leeds. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 109-120. Suna Imre University of Winchester, Winchester, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords dance, processes, movement, interview, Tufnell Suna Imre is a dance artist and senior lecturer in Dance at the University of Winchester. She specializes in improvisation and has collaborated with a diverse range of artists to create cross-disciplinary installations and performances throughout the United Kingdom. Her key interests include developing movement vocabulary that is sourced from the application of somatic processes; and investigating closely the interface between the moving body within specific environments. Other work includes the creation of an improvised duet that utilizes aspects of authentic movement and contact improvisation as its foundation, performed in the United Kingdom in 2009, and a collection of interviews with practitioners and educators in the field of somatic dance practice. › Keeping Your Wits, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 111-120. Mike Ingham University of Lingnan, Department of English, Tuen Mun,, Hong Kong Keywords Evans Chan, essay film, Hong Kong, transnational, Tiananmen Square Mike Ingham has a Modern Languages tertiary background in the United Kingdom. He now teaches in the English Studies programme at the Department of English in Lingnan University, Hong Kong. He is interested in many aspects of performing, particularly drama, poetry and music, and is a founder member of Theatre Action, a Hong Kongbased theatre group that specializes in action research on more literary drama texts. As well as doing scholarly work on theatre in performance and cinema, he directs theatre in Hong Kong and writes performing arts criticism for local media. His books include Staging Fictions (Edwin Mellen Press, 2004) and Hong Kong: A Cultural and Literary History (Signal/HKU Press/OUP, 2007). › Following the dream/passing the meme: Shakespeare in ‘translation’, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 111-126. Michael I. Jackson Reverend Michael Jackson qualified as a solicitor but then left legal practice to become director of a charity. He concurrently studied for the ministry and was ordained priest. He is a member of the CCOA Research Group. Keywords charity, ministry, art education › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Christian Jacquemin LIMSI-CNRS & University Paris Sud 11, Computer Science Department, Bat 480, Campus Scienfifique d'Orsay, Orsay, 91400, France Keywords computer graphics, augmented reality, cinema, new media, technology Christian Jacquemin is a Professor in Computer Science at the University of Paris-11 and Head of the Visualisation and Interaction project at CNRS-LIMSI. He has published major conferences in Information Retrieval and Information Visualisation. He authored a book on Natural Language Processing published by MIT Press in 2001. He is involved in several collaborations on artistic application of interactive graphics (theatre, art installations, sound and graphic design). His current research interests include information, interactive 3D graphics and audio, and advanced graphics rendering and its applications to arts. › Revisiting the layer/mask paradigm for augmented scenery, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 237-258. Kurt Jensen Keywords Agnes DeMille, Oscar Hammerstein II, Oklahoma!, Richard Rodgers, Rouben Mamoulian Kurt Jensen, an independent scholar in Alexandria, Virginia, was the researcher for Michael Sragow’s biography Victor Fleming: An American Movie Master (2008, Pantheon). He is a graduate of Roanoke College. He is writing Rouben Mamoulian: The Art of Gods and Monkeys for University Press of Mississippi. › What did Mamoo do? The Rouben Mamoulian papers and Oklahoma!, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 247-259. Daniel Jernigan Nanyang Technological University, Department of English, S3.2 B4 27, 639798, Singapore Keywords augmented reality, virtual reality, theatre masks, Gopal Baratham Daniel Jernigan is Assistant Professor of English at Nanyang Technological University, Singapore. His interests include drama and theatre studies, postmodernism and creative writing. Dr. Jernigan’s critical work on Caryl Churchill and Tom Stoppard has been published in Modern Drama and Comparative Drama. His edited collection, Drama and the Postmodern: Assessing the Limits of Metatheatre (2008) is available through 48 Daniel Jernigan, Stephen Fernandez, Russell Pensyl and Lee Shangping Cambria Press. › Digitally augmented reality characters in live theatre performances, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 35-49. Albert Jewell Reverend Dr. Albert Jewell is a Methodist minister, who recently completed a Ph.D. at the University of Wales on the topic of well-being in older Methodists. He is a member of the CCOA Research group. Keywords Methodism, art therapy, art education › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Jamie Jewett Choreographer and multimedia artist Jamie Jewett is the artistic Lostwax / Rhode Island School of Design, Digital + Media, 96 Transit St, Providence, RI, 2906, United States of America director of Lostwax. He has created numerous multimedia performances exploring the use of site-specific video, interactivity, and the real-time manipulation of media sources in a dance idiom based on release technique. Jamie teaches at the Rhode Island School of Design and Brown University. Keywords dance, media studies, video, interactivity, technology › Seeing the mind, stopping the mind, the art of Bill Viola, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 81-94. Jeffrey Johnson Open University, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes, Buckinghamshire, MK7 6AA, United Kingdom Keywords architecture, complex systems, interactivity, urban space, 4D design Jeffrey Johnson is Professor of Complexity Science and Design in the Department of Innovation and Design at the Open University. He is principal investigator of the designing for the 21st Century Cluster 'Embracing Complexity in Design 2' funded jointly by the AHRC and the EPSRC. Jeffrey is also Head of Department of Design, Development, Environment and Materials. › An approach to the design of interactive environments, with reference to choreography, architecture, the science of complex systems and 4D design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 281-. Patrick M. Jones SetnoSyracuse Universityr School of Music, Syracuse University, 215 Crouse College, Syracuse, NY 13244, United States of America Keywords lifelong learning, lifespan, music, education, school music Patrick M. Jones, Ph.D., is a Professor and Director of the Setnor School of Music at Syracuse University. He has enjoyed an international career as a conductor of military and youth bands and is Conductor Emeritus of the Sinfonisches Blasorchester Eifel-Ardennen. He has presented papers and published articles on a variety of topics. His scholarly interests include music education theory, history and policy. He has served as an officer and board member of various professional organizations is currently national chair of the MENC History Special Research Interest Group, a member of the ISME Music Policy: Cultural, Educational and Mass Media Commission, and serves on the editorial boards of the International Journal of Community Music and Visions of Research in Music Education. › Lifewide as well as lifelong: broadening primary and secondary school music education's service to students' musical needs, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 201-214. Christopher Jones University of Hull, Creative Music Technology, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Christopher Jones teaches studio production and live sound at the University of Hull, Scarborough Campus. He also provides support to the studio facilities within the School of Arts and New Media. He studied Creative Music Technology as an undergraduate, and then Sonic Arts as a postgraduate. Christopher is currently enrolled as a Ph.D. student with the university. Keywords peer learning, collaboration, recording, music › Peer learning in the music studio, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 55-70. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 196-206. Dawn Joseph Deakin University, Melbourne, Faculty of Arts and education, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, 3125 Victoria, Australia Keywords culture, multiculturalism, identity, community music Dr. Dawn Joseph is a senior lecturer in Music and Education Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Education, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia. She is currently responsible for teaching both undergraduate and postgraduate courses. Dawn researches, publishes and reviews in national and international journals in the areas of teacher education, African music, cultural diversity and multiculturalism. She is currently a national committee member of the Australian Society for Music Education (ASME) and also serves as a committee member for the ASME Victorian Chapter. › Sharing music and culture through singing in Australia, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 169-181. Tim Joss Keywords music, travellers, Great Britain, community music Tim Joss is Director of the Rayne Foundation, which works to help reduce exclusion, heal divisions in society and create new relationships for the benefit of society. In 2008, Tim wrote ‘New Flow – a better future for artists, citizens and the state’. The Public Engagement Foundation, which Tim founded, applies ‘New Flow’ ideas. It aims to open up markets for the arts in non-arts settings. Previously Tim was Artistic Director & Chief Executive of festivals in Bath. He was Chair of the British Arts Festivals Association and Chair of the Community Music Commission of the International Society for Music Education. He is currently Chair of the Culture Forum created by the National Campaign for the Arts and Arts & Business and is a trustee of the London Sinfonietta. › Community music development in Great Britain, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 321-326. Olaf Jubin Regent’s American College, Inner Circle, Regent’s Park, London, NW1 4NS, United Kingdom Olaf Jubin is a senior lecturer in Media Studies and Musical Theatre at Regent’s American College London and a visiting lecturer on the MA in Musical Theatre at Goldsmiths College, University of London. He has written and co-edited several books, among them an analysis of the dubbing and subtitling of film musicals. Keywords US movie musical, US media corporations, dubbing, subtitling, German-language musical market › From That's Entertainment! to That's Entertainment? – globalization and the consumption of the Hollywood musical in Germany and Austria, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 235-251. › Experts without expertise? Findings of a comparative study of American, British and German-language reviews of musicals by Stephen Sondheim and Andrew Lloyd Webber, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 185-197. Karen Jurs-Munby University of Lancaster, Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts, The Roundhouse, Lancaster, LA1 4YW, United Kingdom Karen Jürs-Munby teaches Theatre Studies at the Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts, Lancaster University. Her research interests include theories of acting and performing, relationships between text and performance, and more generally new dramaturgies in contemporary theatre. Her translation and introduction to Hans-Thies Lehmann’s Postdramatic Theatre appeared in 2006. Keywords text, performance, postdramatic theatre › Text Exposed: Displayed texts as players onstage in contemporary theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 101-114. Deborah Kapchan New York University, Department of Performance Studies, 721 Broadway, 6th Floor, New York, NY 10003, United States of America Keywords Sufism, community, liturgy, secularism, religion Deborah Kapchan is Associate Professor of Performance Studies at New York University. She writes on aesthetics, music, narrative and religion in North Africa and the North African diaspora. She is the author of Gender on the Market: Moroccan Women and the Revoicing of Tradition (University of Pennsylvania, 1996), as well as Traveling Spirit Masters: Moroccan Trance and Music in the Global Marketplace (Wesleyan University Press, 2007). She has also written a third book, Poetic Justice: Translating Art and Ideology in Morocco (contracted with University of Texas Press). She has been a Guggenheim Fellow, a Fulbright-Hays recipient, as well as a grantee of the American Institute of Maghreb Studies, the Wenner-Gren Foundation and the Social Science Research Council. › Singing community/remembering in common: Sufi liturgy and North African identity in southern France, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 9-23. Claudia Kappenberg University of Brighton, School of Arts and Media, Flat 2, 56-57 Ainger Road, London, NW3 3AH, United Kingdom Keywords performance, sitespecificity, choreography, film, screendance Claudia Kappenberg danced professionally in Europe and New Zealand and completed an MA Fine Art/Film and Video at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in 1998. She is a senior lecturer in Performance and Visual Art at the University of Brighton. Her projects comprise single screen work as well as screen-based installations and live site-specific events and have been shown in Europe, the United States and the Middle East. Claudia is co-founder of the White Market project and co-curated the What If… Festival in London in 2010. She runs an international Screendance Network with UK- and US-based scholars and artists and is Co-Editor of the International Journal of Screendance. Research interests include screendance and interdisciplinary performance, site-specific work; theories and histories of the body and historical developments in dance, film and artist’s video; questions of representation within a post-modern framework, feminist debates within post-modernism and questions › Does screendance need to look like dance?, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 89-105. Pamela Karantonis University of Greenwich, Department of Communications and Creative Arts, Park Row, London, SE10 9LS, United Kingdom Keywords gender studies, musicals and opera, androgyny, impersonation, popular culture Pamela is a senior lecturer in Drama at the University of the West of England, Bristol. She has a practical interest in the areas of opera, contemporary experimental performance and postcolonial theory. She has also taught at the University of New South Wales Sydney, where she completed her doctoral thesis. She is an active researcher with the Music Theatre Working Group of the International Federation for Theatre Research. Additionally Pamela has presented papers at conferences held by the Theatre and Performance Research Association, the Amsterdam School of Cultural Analysis and Song, Stage and Screen in Portsmouth and Leeds. › Takarazuka is burning: music theatre and the performance of sexual and gender identities in modern Japan, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 153-166. Sidsel Karlsen Hedmark University College, Department of Teacher Education and Science, 2418 Elverum, Norway Keywords music, education, festivals, community music, practice Sidsel Karlsen works as Professor of Music Education at Hedmark University College in Hamar, Norway and as a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Music Education, Sibelius Academy in Helsinki, Finland. She holds a Bachelor of Music Education and a Master of Music from the Norwegian Academy of Music, and received her Ph.D. in Music Education at Luleå University of Technology, Sweden, in 2007. Prior work experiences include freelancing as a classical singer, working as a community musician and as a festival administrator. Dr. Karlsen teaches general music education theory and has published articles in Scandinavian and international journals. Her research interest lies, among other things, within the area of exploring musical learning within informal contexts outside school as well as music education in multicultural societies. › Learning through music festivals, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 129-141. Kate Katafiasz Newman University College, Creative Arts, Genners Lane, Bartley Green, Birmingham, B32 3NT, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, psychology, Edward Bond, Lacan, graph of desire, trauma theory Kate Katafiasz was for several years a drama teacher in Birmingham secondary schools. She moved into teacher training before setting up and running a popular Single and Combined Honours Drama degree at Newman University College in Birmingham, where she now works part-time. Her interest in Edward Bond’s plays stems from his work in Birmingham schools with Big Brum Theatre in Education Company and the National Association of Teachers of Drama. She is currently finishing her Ph.D.: 'Drama and Desire', which explores Bond's dramaturgical innovations in relation to Lacanian topology. Other research interests include Lacan’s ‘Graph of desire’ and understanding the psycho-semiotic implications of using Lacan’s registers in performance; applying insights from Lacan’s graph to Edward Bond’s new dramaturgy and recent plays; and positioning Trauma Theory in relation to the Graph of Desire and contemporary theatre. › Quarrelling with Brecht: Understanding Bond’s post-structuralist political aesthetic, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 237-251. John Keefe London Metropolitan University/Queens University (Canada) BISC, Sir John Cass Department of Art, Media and Design/Arts & Humanities, Central House, 59-63 Whitechapel High Street, London, E1 7PF, United Kingdom Keywords empathy, materiality, knowing complicity, economy of regard, spectatorial dramaturgy, physical theatre, recycling John Keefe is a lecturer in Theatre, Performance and Film, a theatre director and performance dramaturg. He has developed projects and material on ‘physical theatre’ and on the role of the performance dramaturg for Mime Action Group/Total Theatre, the Directors Guild of Great Britain and the Dramaturgs Network. He is a senior lecturer at the SJCAMD Undergraduate Centre, London Metropolitan University and field lecturer in Theatre, Drama and Performance at the Queen’s University (Canada) Bader International Study Centre. His most recent publications include ‘Berkoff’s “Londons”: staging psycho-geographies of the feared and the ecstatic’ (Literary London, 7: 2, 2009), 'A Spectatorial Dramaturgy, or the spectator enters the (ethical) frame' (Performing Ethos 1:1, 2010), and 'Play(ing) It Again: recycling as theatres, histories, memories' (Art History and Criticism 6, 2010). › A spectatorial dramaturgy, or the spectator enters the (ethical) frame, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 35-52. Adele Keeley The Arts University College at Bournemouth, Faculty of Media and Performance, Wallisdown, Poole, Dorset, BH12 5HH, United Kingdom Keywords costume design, digital arts Adele Keeley has an MA in Theatre Arts from Nottingham Trent University where she focused her research on the Digital Platform for Costume Design Communication. Her thesis and subsequent articles on the subject track how the digital platform can inform both the process and the communication of design. Currently, Adele works as a senior lecturer at the Arts University College at Bournemouth teaching on the BA (Hons) Costume with Performance Design course. As a costume practitioner Adele has worked as both a costume maker and designer and continues to practice alongside her teaching – using it as a platform for research. Adele recently co-ordinated a project involving a group of UK students working collaboratively with two professional costume designers from North America. The project tracked the design and realization of costumes via the Internet. › The digital platform for costume design communication, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 41-48. Tim Keenan University of Queensland, English, Media Studies and Art History, Brisbane, QLD 4072, Australia Keywords English Restoration Theatre, Lincoln's Inn Fields theatre 1661-1674, Modern Japanese Theatre, Hirata Oriza, Seinendan Dr. Tim Keenan lectures in Drama at the University of Queensland. His main research interests are centred on English Restoration theatre (1660-1700): particularly scenic staging 1660-1674. He also has a practice-led interest in modern Japanese theatre, especially the plays of Hirata Oriza. Before becoming an academic, Tim directed several plays in London, including the European premiere of Betsuyaku Minoru’s The Elephant, which won an inaugural Japan Festival Fund award in 1994. At the University of Hull, he also directed large-scale productions of John Dryden and William Davenant’s 1667 adaptation of Shakespeare’s The Tempest (2007), and the first English-language production of Hirata Oriza’s The Scientifically Minded, which toured to the Agora Theatre, Tokyo in April 2010. › Adapting the adaptors: staging Davenant and Dryden's Restoration Tempest, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 65-77. Jem Kelly University Of Chichester, College Lane, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 6PE, United Kingdom Keywords audito, Three Tales, Derrida, Merleau-Ponty, interactivity Jem Kelly is a senior lecturer in Performance Arts at the University of Chichester. Jem's research practice interrogates combined media performances that generate new modes of apprehension and conditions of reception. His current research interest centres on interactions of live performance elements and play-back media, particularly directionality of sound immersive performance environments. › Auditory space: emergent modes of apprehension and historical representations in Three Tales, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 207-236. Stewart Kember Lancaster University, BigDog Interactive, Lancaster, Lancashire, LA1 4YW, United Kingdom Keywords architecture, installation, performance Stewart Kember is a founding member and Director of BigDog Interactive. As part of his work with BigDog (and formerly .:thePooch:.), Stewart has conceived and constructed bespoke interactive systems for a wide variety of contexts and audiences. This catalogue of past works has furnished him with a wealth of knowledge and experience in the development of installation and performance support systems. › A support architecture for high dependability in digital performance andinstallation art, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 87-. Mary Copland Kennedy University of Victoria, PO Box 3010, STN CSC Victoria, BC V8W 3N4, Australia Keywords choir, community, culture, teaching, learning Mary Copland Kennedy is an Associate Professor of Music Education at the University of Victoria, BC, Canada, where she teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in Music Education in addition to conducting the Philomela Women’s Choir. Dr. Kennedy’s research interests include choral music, creativity, and music and community. Among her publications are articles in Journal of Research in Music Education, British Journal of Music Education, International Journal of Music Education, Music Education Research, Research Studies in Music Education, and Choral Journal. In addition, she has presented papers and sessions at regional, national and international conferences and written three book chapters for Canadian Music Educators Association publications. › The Gettin' Higher Choir: Exploring culture, teaching and learning in a community chorus, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 183200. Baz Kershaw University of Warwick, School of Theatre, Performance and Cultural Policy Studies, Millburn House, Coventry, CV4 7HS, United Kingdom Keywords community-based theatre, performance ecology Baz Kershaw was formerly Chair of Drama at the University of Bristol, and Director of the five-year research project PARIP (Practice as Research in Performance). He trained and worked as a design engineer before reading English and Philosophy at Manchester University and holds higher degrees from the Universities of Hawaii and Exeter. He has extensive experience as a director and writer in experimental, radical and community-based theatre, including productions at the legendary Drury Lane Arts Lab in London. More recently he has mounted site-specific productions on the Bristol heritage ship, the SS Great Britain. He has published many articles in international journals, and is the author of The Politics of Performance (Routledge 1992) and The Radical in Performance (Routledge 1999), and editor of The Cambridge History of British Theatre, Vol 3 – Since 1895 (2004). › Performance, Memory, Heritage, History, Spectacle – The Iron Ship, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.3, 132-149. Alexandra Kertz-Welzel Ludwig Maximilian University in Munich, Music Education, Munich, Germany Keywords Germany, cross-cultural studies, typologies, history Alexandra Kertz-Welzel is Professor and Chair of the Department of Music Education at Ludwig Maximilian University (LMU) in Munich, Germany. She obtained a Ph.D. in Musicology from Saarland University in Saarbrücken, Germany, as well as MAs in Music Education, Germanics, Philosophy, Piano Performance and Harpsichord Performance. From 2005-2011, she was lecturer of Music Education and Philosophy of Music Education at the University of Music in Saarbrücken, Germany, and, from 2002-2005, visiting scholar and guest lecturer of Music Education at the University of Washington in Seattle, WA (United States). › A matter of comparative music education? Community music in Germany, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 401-409. Andrew King University of Hull, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough North, Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Keywords learning technology, music, studio practice, problem solving, contingent learning, peer learning Dr. Andrew King is the Deputy Dean for Learning and Teaching, the Programme Director for the MEd. in ‘Music, Technology and Education’, a lecturer in Creative Music Technology, and a University Teaching Fellow at the University of Hull, Scarborough Campus. His main teaching and research areas include Recording, Psychoacoustics,Live Sound, Music and ICT. He is also editor of the journal Music, Technology and Education. › Problem solving with learning technology in the music studio, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 57-68. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 167-185. › Editorial, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 3-4. › Peer learning in the music studio, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 55-70. › An expert in absentia: a case study for using technology to support recording studio practice, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 175185. › Editorial, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 3-4. Rachel Kirk School of Languages, Literatures and Performing Arts, 10 University Square, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, BT71NN, United Kingdom Keywords Plautus, translating comedy, carnivalesque Rachel Kirk is a doctoral candidate in Translation at Queen’s University of Belfast. Her practice as research thesis focuses on documenting the process of translating Plautus’ Roman comedy Casina for performance in an effort to reconnect the theory and practice of theatre translation. Her research interests include theatre translation, translating comedy, classical performance reception and the carnivalesque. › The time-travellingmiser: Translation andtransformation in Europeancomedy, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 39-46. Phil R. Kirkman University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education, 184 Hills Road, Cambridge, CB2 8PQ, United Kingdom Keywords musical cultures, music education, National Curriculum As well as his involvement with the Faculty PGCE course at Cambridge University, Phil spends time studying and working in the field of music education research. Before this he worked as a music teacher in Greater Manchester and later as a high school Director of Music in Essex. Phil is committed to widening equality through music education and broadening our understanding of how school classrooms can become environments that facilitate the emergence of musical cultures. He frequently contributes to several web publications and maintains a personal blog on music education and technology. He also regularly provides in-service training for teachers in the Eastern region and writes and performs music with groups local to the Cambridge area. › Exploring contexts fordevelopment: Secondarymusic students’ computermediatedcomposing, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 107-124. Hilary Kneale independent artist Keywords body-based responses, fine art, VAIN liveart Hilary Kneale is an Oxford-based independent artist, with a background in education, fine art and movement, who works both within the United Kingdom and Europe. Her key areas of interest are body-based responses in relation to site and object through presence, performance and installation. She works with these forms in a rich mix of cross-art-form collaboration both within natural and man-made environments and other specifically constructed landscapes. As cofounder of VAIN liveart, an Oxford-based live art platform that fed the National Live Art Review (NLAR), Hilary has a continued interest in supporting new and emerging practitioners, currently through undergraduate and postgraduate guest teaching. When working as an accredited teacher of Gabrielle Roth’s 5 Rhythms™, her teaching is informed by her study of non-stylized movement, with Helen Poynor. › A field guide to a physical philosophy, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 205-217. › ‘You’re asking me to what…? getting moving in North Bovey’, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 125-128. Lone Koefoed Hansen Aarhus University, Department of Aesthetic Studies, Langelandsgade 139, Aarhus C, DK-8000, Denmark Keywords locative media, psychogeography, site-specific performativity, culture, geography, mapping Dr. Lone Koefoed Hansen is a researcher working in the interface between mobile media, urban space and everyday performativity. She is an Assistant Professor at Aarhus University (Denmark) and recently received her Ph.D. degree, which focused on digital aesthetics and culture in the age of pervasive computing and mobile media. She is currently partaking in the research project Digital Urban Living and is a board member of the Digital Aesthetics Research Centre. › Lost in location – on how (not) to situate aliens, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 3-22. Katja Kolcio Wesleyan University, Department of Dance, 275 Washington Terrace, Middletown, CT, 6459, United States of America Keywords somatics, dance, embodiment, identity Katja Kolcio, Ph.D. is Associate Professor of Dance at Wesleyan University. Her research is in social somatic theory, investigating the role of physical engagement and creativity in practices of knowledge production, and about modern dance as a political art form. Katja's choreography engages the community and environment within which it occurs. Her interests also include integrating traditional arts into contemporary performance. Her most recent publications are Movable Pillars Creating a Foundation for Dance Studies in the Academy, 1956-1978 (2010, Wesleyan University Press), 'Faking It: The Necessary Blind Spots of Understanding' (2009, Cultural Studies/Critical Methodologies), 'A Somatic Engagement of Technology' (2005, International Journal for Performance Art and Digital Media), and book reviews in the Dance Research Journal and the New England Theater Journal. › A somatic engagement of technology, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.2, 101-126. Jozefina Komporaly De Montfort University, Department of Performance and Digital Arts, De Montfort University, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords stage translation, drama, education Jozefina Komporaly is a senior lecturer in Drama at De Montfort University, where she has been lecturing since 2005. She has published in the field of contemporary British and European theatre, women’s writing and translation and adaptation for the stage. She is the author of the monograph Staging Motherhood: Contemporary British Women Playwrights (Palgrave, 2006). Her current work focuses on contemporary francophone theatre and on the role of translation in the international circulation of cultural products. › Adaptation, Translation, Multimediality:A Hungarian Bestseller Across Cultures, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 191-204. › The Gate Theatre: A translation powerhouse on the inter-war British stage, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 129-143. Mitchell Kossak Lesley University, 29 Everett Street, Cambridge, MA, 2138, United States of America Keywords mental health, therapeutic massage, expressive arts therapies Mitchell Kossak is Assistant Professor and Division Director, Division of Expressive Therapies at Lesley University, United States. He is also the co-chair of The Institute For Body, Mind and Spirituality. He has presented his work and research at conferences nationally and internationally. He is a licensed mental health counselor, and nationally certified in therapeutic massage and bodywork. His clinical work combines expressive arts therapies with body-centered approaches with a variety of populations. His doctoral studies was in Interdisciplinary Studies with a concentration in Psychology and a specialization in Transpersonal Psychology and Expressive Arts Therapies. His current research focuses on art based improvisational structures that can lead toward and enhance therapeutic attunement. › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 223-231. › Editorial, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 133-137. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. › EDITORIAL, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 107-111. Violetta Kostka Academy of Music, Gdańsk, ul. Kmieca 5, 80-279 Gdańsk, Poland Keywords neotonality, satire, piano, manuscript, neoclassicism, opera Violetta Kostka was trained at the University of Poznań and received her Ph.D. from the Institute of Art of the Polish Academy of Sciences in Warsaw. She has won scientific scholarships from the Polish Library in Paris and the University of Cambridge and currently teaches Music History at the Academy of Music in Gdańsk. A member of the Polish Composers’ Union, she has authored more than 50 articles, mainly on musical life in eighteenth century Gdańsk, and the music of Polish composers of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. She has taken part in many conferences at home and abroad, including conferences in Greifswald, Leipzig and Frankfurt. Dr. Kostka headed a project entitled 'Tadeusz Zygfryd Kassern. Life and output' financed by the Committee of Scientific Research and is the co-editor of a forthcoming Lexicon of the XXth Century Culture of Pomerania. › The rediscovery of Comedy of the Dumb Wife (1953) by Polish composer Tadeusz Kassern, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 45-52. Angelos Koutsourakis University of Sussex, Brighton, United Kingdom Keywords Lars von Trier, Brecht, form Angelos Koutsourakis has recently submitted his Ph.D. for examination at the University of Sussex. His Ph.D. thesis offers a post-Brechtian reading of Lars von Trier, with the view to identifying the political implications of form in his films. He has published articles on Lars von Trier, Bertolt Brecht, Theo Angelopoulos, Alexander Kluge and other European auteurs. › From post-Brechtian performance to post-Brechtian cinema: Shirley Clarke’s adaptation of The Living Theatre’s production of The Connection, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 141-154. Susan Kozel Malmö University, MEDEA Collaborative Media Institute, 205 06 Malmö, Sweden Keywords art, research, choreography, media studies, technology Susan Kozel is a dancer and writer and is Professor of New Media with the MEDEA Collaborative Media Institute at the Malmö University, Sweden, and is Director of Mesh Performance Practices. Her performances and installations have toured internationally and she has published widely. She is the author of Closer: Performance, Technologies, Phenomenology, published by MIT Press. › Mobile social choreographies: Choreographic insight as a basis for artistic research into mobile technologies, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 137-148. Paula Kramer Coventry University, Coventry School of Art and Design, ICE Building, Puma Way, Coventry, CV1 2TT, United Kingdom Paula Kramer is currently a Ph.D. student at Coventry University, and her practice-based research is dedicated to the exploration of nonstylized movement in the natural environment. She performs, teaches and researches in remote rural as well as urban sites. › Book Review, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 113-116. Keywords practice-based research, natural environment Orly Krasner City College of New York, Division of Humanities and the Arts, 160 Convent Avenue, New York, NY, 10031-9198, United States of America Dr. Krasner, Ph.D., began working at the City College of New York in 2009 after having been an important member of the adjunct faculty for many years. Aside from employing her expertise in FIQWS and Elementary Musicianship, she is also the Music 10100 supervisor, spearheading an attempt to better coordinate the 32 sections that are taught each semester. › REVIEWS, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 117-123. Keywords musical theatre, Elementary Musicianship Katja Krebs University of Bristol, Senate House, Tyndall Avenue, Bristol, BS8 1TH, United Kingdom Keywords place, community, practice-as-research, short film, arts Katja Krebs’ research interests are mainly in areas related to translation studies, theatre history and historiography, and adaptations for performance. She is particularly interested in the relationship between translation practice and dramatic tradition; she authored the book, Cultural Dissemination and Translational Communities (St. Jerome, 2007), which explores ways in which an interdisciplinary approach to the study of theatre history can provide insights into the formation of (national) dramatic traditions. This project was supported by an AHRC grant. Related research interests include the relationship between concepts of translation and adaptation, early twentieth century European theatre history, the relationship between folk performance and Realpolitik, and the investigation of translation as performative practice. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 83-85. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 173-175. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 91-93. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 197-199. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 3-4. › FOUND IN TRANSLATION – GREEK DRAMA IN ENGLISH, J. MICHAEL WALTON (2007), Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 101-102. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 225-226. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 111-113. › Editorial, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 3-4. › EDITORIAL, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 113-114. Gunter Kreutz Oldenburg University, Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg, Ammerländer Heerstraße 114-118, Oldenburg, D-26129, Germany Keywords choral singing, psychological, well-being, WHOQOL-BREF, cross-national survey Gunter Kreutz is Professor of Systematic Musicology, Oldenburg University, Oldenburg, Germany. Gunter Kreutz studied (historical) musicology, media studies and literature at the University of Marburg, and (systematic) musicology and Communication Scientific basis of speech and music at the Technical University of Berlin. After a year abroad studying at the San Francisco State University, United States, he earned Master of Arts degree from the Technical University of Berlin. In 2004 he was appointed University Lecturer in Music Education at the Goethe University in Frankfurt, with a focus on systematic musicology. From April 2006 to April 2008 Kreutz worked as a Research Fellow at the Royal Northern College of Music, Manchester, United Kingdom. In February 2008 he was offered a professorship of Systematic Musicology at the Carl von Ossietzky University of Oldenburg. His research interests lie in music (neuro) cognitive and emotional (social) psychology of music, performance, music and health research. › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. Andrew Krikun Bergen Community College, 400 Paramus Road, Paramus, New Jersey, 7652, United States of America Keywords adult education, community music, history, New Deal, Willem Van de Wall Andrew Krikun is Assistant Professor of Music at Bergen Community College in Paramus, New Jersey and a Ph.D. candidate in Music Education at New York University. He is a member of the steering committee for the North American Coalition for Community Music. His articles have appeared in the Journal of Popular Music Studies, the Journal of Historical Research in Music Education, Diversity Digest, and The Beat. He has presented at professional conferences for the College Music Society, the International Association for the Study of Popular Music and Music and Lifelong Learning. In 2006, he was awarded a Teaching Excellence Award from the University of Texas, National Institute for Staff and Organizational Development. As a singer-songwriter, he has maintained an active career as a performer, composer and recording artist. › Community music during the New Deal: the contributions of Willem Van de Wall and Max Kaplan, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 165173. Nathan B. Kruse University of North Texas, Music Education, 1155 Union Circle #311367, Denton, TX 76203-5017, United States of America Keywords community, music, adult education, sociology Nathan Kruse is an Assistant Professor of Music Education in the College of Music at the University of North Texas, where he currently teaches Music Education methods courses, supervises instrumental music student teachers and assists the Denton New Horizons Senior Band. Dr. Kruse taught for ten years in the public schools of New Mexico and Michigan and currently researches precepts of adult Music Education and ethnographic traditions of community music. He holds a BME from Butler University in Indianapolis, an MME from the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque and a Ph.D. in Music Education from Michigan State University in East Lansing. Dr. Kruse is also the Southwestern Division Representative of the Adult and Community Music Education Special Research Interest Group (ACME SRIG) within the Music Educators National Conference (MENC): The National Association for Music Education. › ‘An elusive bird’: perceptions of music learning among Canadian and American adults, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 215225. Stefanie Kuhn University of Exeter, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, United Kingdom Keywords human-computer interaction, motion tracking, presence, performance, extended presence Stefanie Kuhn received her Diploma in Applied Theatre Studies at the Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen (Germany) and has worked as Assistant Dramatic Adviser and Assistant Director for several opera productions at the theaters of Gießen and Luzern (Switzerland). In October 2005 she began her Ph.D. research at the University of Exeter, where she is associated with the research project 'Performing Presence: From the Live to the Simulated'. She explores the impact of new media technologies on the performer’s presence in contemporary opera performance. › Extended presence: The instrumental(ised) body in André Werner's Marlowe: The Jew of Malta, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 221-236. Bernhard Kuhn Bucknell University, Dept. of Foreign Language Programs, Lewisburg, PA 17837, United States of America Keywords film, opera, Aida, Clemente Fracassi, intermediality, postwar Italian cinema (1945–55), adaptation Dr. Bernhard Kuhn is Associate Professor of Italian Studies at Bucknell University, where he teaches Italian language, culture and cinema. His current areas of research include Italian opera, Italian cinema and intermediality. He is the author of a book entitled Die Oper im italienischen Film (Opera in Italian Cinema) and several articles concerning intermedial aspects of the relationship between stage media and film. › The film-opera Aida (1953): intermediality and operatics, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 19-33. Petra Kuppers University of Michigan, Department of English Language and Literature, 2550 Dana Street, Apt 8FG, Berkeley, CA 94704, United States of America Keywords embodiment, dance, writing, choreography, Hijikata, Olimpias Petra Kuppers teaches Performance Studies at the University of Michigan. Publications include The Scar of Visibility: Medical Performances and Contemporary Art (Minnesota, 2007) and Community Performance: An introduction (Routledge, 2007), Disability Culture and Community and Performance: Find a Strange and Twisted Shape (Palgrave, 2011). She is also artistic director of The Olimpias. › Butoh Rhizome: Choreography of a moving writing self, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 79-96. Yuko Kurahashi Kent State University, School of Theatre and Dance, Kent, Ohio, OH 44242-0001, United States of America Keywords Matthias Langhoff, Nick Philippou, Clare Davidson, Laura Harvey, Michael Boyd Yuko Kurahashi teaches in the School of Theatre and Dance at Kent State University, Ohio. She was previously a dramaturg with such companies as Arena Stage (Washington, DC), Group Theatre (Seattle) and La Jolla Playhouse. She is the author of Asian American Culture on Stage: the History of the East West Players (1999). › Theatre as the healing space: Ping Chong’s Children of War, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.1, 23-36. Martha Ladly Ontario College of Art & Design OCAD, 100 McCaul Street, Toronto, Ontario, M5T 1W1, Canada Martha Ladly is Associate Professor of Design at the Ontario College of Art and Design, where her specialty is interactive communication. She is a mentor with the Canadian Film Centre's Interactive Project Lab (IPL) and a faculty member with the Habitat Interactive Art and Entertainment Program. Prior to her appointment at OCAD, Martha was the creative director of HorizonZero; a bilingual internet Keywords phenomenology, new media, internet, community, communication publication dedicated to creating and showcasing the best in digital art and culture in Canada, in collaboration with the Banff New Media Institute and Culture. › Being there: Heidegger and the phenomenon of presence in telematic performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 139-150. Ming-yan Lai The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shatin, NT, Hong Kong SAR, China Keywords testimony, trade unions, subalternity, servitude, interculturalism Ming-yan Lai teaches cultural studies at the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Her interdisciplinary work focuses on issues of alternative modernities, representations of and for the marginalized, oppositional discourses, and gender in intersection with ethnicity, class, and nationality. She is the author of 'Nativism and Modernity: Cultural Contestations in China and Taiwan under Global Capitalism' (2008). Her current research on the experiences, public articulations, and representations of foreign domestic workers in Hong Kong has been published in various journals. › The sexy maid in Indonesian migrant workers' activist theatre: subalternity, performance and witnessing, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 21-34. Paul R. Laird University of Kansas, School of Music, Murphy Hall, Room 334., 1530 Naismith Drive, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045-3102, United States of America Keywords Broadway, musicals, theatre, Leonard Bernstein, Stephen Schwartz Paul R. Laird is Professor of Musicology at the University of Kansas, where he teaches undergraduate and graduate courses in Music History and directs the Instrumental Collegium Musicum. His research interests include American musical theatre and Baroque music. Among his books is Leonard Bernstein: A Guide to Research, and with William A. Everett he is co-author of The Historical Dictionary of the Broadway Musical. Laird and Everett co-edited both editions of The Cambridge Companion to the Musical. › The American musical theatre in 1957, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 5-11. › ‘It Couldn’t Happen Here in Oz’: Wicked and the creation of a ‘critic-proof’ musical, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 35-47. Ian Lamond Born near Liverpool, Ian Lamond grew up in Blackpool. He studied his first degree, which was in Philosophy, at Manchester University. He Sheffield Hallam University, Department of Cultural Policy, 53 Ingleway Avenue, Blackpool, Lancashire, FY3 8JJ, United Kingdom then left academia to work in the arts, initially as a freelance community arts project coordinator and then in local government. In 2005 he studied for an MA in Cultural Policy and Management at Sheffield Hallam University. Since 2007, he has worked at the university as an associate lecturer, becoming a full-time doctoral student in 2009. His interests include somatic theory, semiotics, ontology, cultural theory and political philosophy. Keywords concept of the self, identity, somatic practice, dance, PMLD › One step back, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 225-235. Anne Lanceley University College London, UCL Institute for Women’s Health, Medical School Building, 74 Huntley Street, London, WC1E 6AU, United Kingdom Anne Lanceley is a senior lecturer and Nurse Specialist at UCL Institute for Women’s Health. She combines a clinical role supporting women with gynaecological cancer with running a research programme in symptom management, recovery after treatment and risk reduction for survivors. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords gynaecology, art therapy, nursing, curating Leigh Landy De Montfort University, Music, Technology and Innovation Research Centre, Clephan Building, De Montfort University, Leicester LE1 9BH, UK Keywords electroacoustic music, internet, online learning, communication Leigh Landy (www.mti.dmu.ac.uk/~llandy) holds a Research Chair at De Montfort University where he directs the Music, Technology and Innovation Research Centre. His scholarship is divided between creative and musicological work. His compositions include several for video, dance and theatre. He has worked extensively with the late playwright, Heiner Müller and the new media artist, Michel Jaffrennou and was composer in residence for the Dutch National Theatre during its first years of existence. Currently he is artistic director of Idée Fixe – Experimental Sound and Movement Theatre. His publications focus on the studies of electroacoustic music, including the notion of musical dramaturgy, contemporary music in a cross-arts context, access and the contemporary time-based arts, and devising practices in the performing arts. He is editor of Organised Sound: an international journal of music technology (CUP) and on the editorial board of JMTE and is author of five books including What's › The ElectroAcoustic Resource Site (EARS), Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 69-82. › Discovered whilst entering a new millennium: A technological revolution that will radically influence both music making and music education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 181-188. David Lane Keywords dramaturgy, new writing, terminology, playwriting, Tim Crouch David Lane has been a dramaturg and playwright for seven years, beginning his career as the Literary Assistant at Soho Theatre and Writers’ Centre in London before working freelance with various theatres and new writing organizations. He is now based in Bristol and works across higher education as a tutor of dramaturgy and script development (Exeter University, Goldsmiths College, City University) and also for professional theatres as a dramaturg and script consultant (Theatre Royal Bath, Exeter Northcott, Bristol Old Vic). He has also been commissioned to write several plays for young people and is contributed a new volume on Contemporary British Drama to EUP’s Critical Guides to Literature in 2010. › A Dramaturg's perspective: Looking to the future of script development, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 127-142. Thomas Langston University of Queensland, Penguin, Tasmania, PO Box 203, Australia Keywords choir, social capital, fellowship, community music, community, involvement Thomas Langston is a researcher, music teacher, choir director and singing teacher in north-west Tasmania, Australia. He conducts a large community choir that performs the standard repertoire of large-scale works such as Handel’s Messiah, Haydn’s The Creation, Mendelssohn’s Elijah and Mozart’s Requiem. As well as undertaking research into the relationships between social capital and community music, Thomas is a musicologist whose interests lie in Renaissance music, especially Cavalieri, Striggio, the Camerata and the music of the Florentine court. › It is a life support, isn’t it? Social capital in a community choir, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 163-184. BRETT LASHUA Leeds Metropolitan University, Leeds Metropolitan University, Carnegie Faculty, 221 Cavendish Hall, Headingley, Headingley, LS6 3QS, United Kingdom Keywords Liverpool, heritage, fanzines, cultural geography Brett Lashua is a Lecturer in the Carnegie Faculty at Leeds Metropolitan University. His scholarship is concerned with ethnographic work involving young people, popular music and arts/cultural practices. Questions of history and cultural geographies also run through his work. › ‘A fanzine of record’: Merseysound and mapping Liverpool’s Post Punk popular musicscapes, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 87-104. Carl Lavery Aberystwyth University, Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies, Parry-Williams Building, Aberystwyth, SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Keywords practice, theory, the city, situationism, fluxus Carl Lavery teaches theatre and performance at Aberystwyth University. His monographs, co-edited collections and co-authored books include Jean Genet: Performance and Politics (2006, with Clare Finburgh and Maria Shevtsova), Sacred Theatre (2007, with Ralph Yarrow et al.), Walking, Writing and Performance: Autobiographical Texts by Deirdre Heddon, Carl Lavery & Phil Smith (2009), The Politics of Jean Genet's Theatre: Spaces of Revolution (2010), Contemporary French Theatre and Performance (2011, with Clare Finburgh) and A Lone Twin Companion: Exchanges, Responses, Dialogues (2011, with David Williams). He is currently writing a book on located performance for Manchester University Press. › Teaching Performance Studies: 25 instructions for performance in cities, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 229-238. David Haldane Lawrence Keywords chorus, gender studies, sexuality, homosexuality, comedy, theatre David Haldane Lawrence received his doctorate from Birkbeck College, University of London, in October 2006. Since then he has published articles on nineteenth and early twentieth century theatre and gender issues, as well as presenting papers at recent conferences and seminars. Currently, he is engaged in further research for a forthcoming book on masculinities and the nineteenth century stage. › Chorus boys: words, music and queerness (c.1900-c.1936), Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 157-169. Bryce Lease University of Exeter, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords European theatre, directing, dramaturgy, semiotics, political theatre, homosexuality Bryce Lease is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter, having lectured previously at the University of Bristol. In 2009, he completed his Ph.D., Fantasy or Symptom? The Political in Polish Theatre at the University of Kent, where he worked with the European Theatre Research Network (ETRN). Bryce is currently completing a monograph on theatre and the construction of cultural identity in Poland. His main areas of research concern the intersections between political and psychoanalytic theory and contemporary performance practice. Memberships include the Irish Society for Theatre Research (ISTR), Deutsche Gesellschaft für Theaterwissenschaft, Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA), Performance Stduies International (PSi) and the Queer Studies Working Group within the International Federation for Theatre Research (IFTR). › Contemporary utopian dreams: contemplating Staniewski's Golden Ass, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 35-45. › Reviews, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 113-115. › REVIEWS, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 229-244. Adam J. Ledger University of Hull, Cottingham Road, Hull, Yorkshire, HU6 7RX, United Kingdom Keywords ISTA, flow, Roberta Carreri, Pura Desa, Tom Leabhart, theatre anthropology Adam J. Ledger is a lecturer in drama at the University of Hull, a director, and completing a Ph.D. in Performance Practice. His research covers performance practice, especially directing and acting; devising; pedagogies of practice in the university; documentation and the Odin Teatret. He has contributed to the work of, and maintained connections with, several European universities and organisations. He is a module writer and tutor on Rose Bruford’s MA Theatre and Performance Studies. Recently, he participated in validation exercises for external institutions. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.2, 153-164. › Looking up ‘secrets’: definitions, narrative and pragmatism in A Dictionary of Theatre Anthropology: the Secret Art of the Performer, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.2, 147-160. Roc Lee Keywords research, music, education, history, prison Roc Lee has a MA in Music Composition with an emphasis in Stage Music from the Catholic University of America (CUA), where he is studying composition under Dr. Andrew E. Simpson. He graduated from the the Greatbatch School of Music at Houghton College in the Spring of 2007 with a Bachelor’s in Music Composition magna cum laude under Dr. Mark Hijleh. His experience serving on AmeriCorps prompted his interest in music education in prisons and music in support of social justice. He is active in organizing events and recitals that pertain to his special interests. › Music education in prisons: A historical overview, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 7-18. Rosemary Lee Middlesex University, 29 Harcourt Rosemary Lee is a choreographer, performer and a research associate at ResCen (Middlesex University). She presents her work in a wide variety of contexts and works with performers of all ages, both professional and non-professional. Road, London, N22 7XW, United Kingdom › Writing with a choreographer's notebook, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 2141. Keywords practitioner knowledge, practice as research, dance writing Mary A. Leglar University of Georgia, Hugh Hodgson School of Music, 250 River Road, Athens, GA 30602, United States of America Keywords schools, music, community, history Mary A. Leglar is Professor and Associate Director for academic programmes at the University of Georgia's Hodgson School of Music. She is editor of the Southeastern Journal of Music Education and the Georgia Music News, and has served on the editorial board of the Journal of Music Teacher Education. She has published in a number of professional journals, including The Quarterly and the International Journal of Music Education, and has co-authored chapters on teacher education in The Handbook of Research on Music Teaching and Learning (Schirmer) and The New Handbook of Research on Music Teaching and Learning (Oxford). A recipient of the UGA Sandy Beaver Professorship for excellence in teaching, she has presented research on teacher education at professional conferences internationally. › Community music in the United States: An overview of origins and evolution, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 343-353. Thomas Leitch University of Delaware, English Department, 212 Memorial Hall, Newark DE, DE, 19716, United States of America Professor Thomas Leitch teaches Film Studies in the English Department at the University of Delaware and has published widely on adaptation studies. His recent contributions to the field include Film Adaptation and Its Discontents (2007). › Vampire adaptation, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 516. Keywords film studies, film adaptation Samuel Leong Hong Kong Institute of Education, Department of Cultural & Creative Arts, Department of Cultural & Creative Arts, Faculty of Arts & Sciences, The Hong Kong Institute of Professor Samuel Leong (Ph.D.) is Associate Dean (Quality Assurance & Enhancement) of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and Head of the Department of Cultural and Creative Arts. He is also Director of the UNESCO Arts in Education Observatory for Research in Local Cultures and Creativity in Education, and serves as Director of Research of the International Drama/Theatre and Education Association (IDEA) and on the boards of eight refereed journals. Education, 10 Lo Ping Road, Taipo, New Territories, Hong Kong Keywords › Navigating the emerging futures in music education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 233-243. Lisa Lewis University of Glamorgan, Department of Arts and Media School of Humanities, Law and Social Sciences, Pontypridd, Rhondda, CF37 1DL, United Kingdom Keywords Welsh-language drama, Wales, performance, pedagogy Lisa Lewis is currently a reader in Drama and Head of Division at the University of Glamorgan, Wales. She was previously a lecturer in Theatre and Performance Studies at the University of Wales, Aberystwyth. Her research interests cover heritage and performance; performance, culture and identity; site specific theatre; museums and heritage sites as performance; performative writing; performance and everyday life; and autobiographical performance. She is currently writing a book, Performing Wales: History and Site, for University of Wales Press, based on several years of practice-as-research in the field of heritage and performance. › Welsh-language production/Welsh-language performance: the resistant body, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.3, 163-176. Graham Ley University of Exeter, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Graham Ley is a Professor in the Exeter University Drama Department. His books include From Mimesis to Interculturalism (1999) and The Theatricality of Greek Tragedy (2007). His research interests include, in addition to classical theatre and British Asian theatre, dramaturgy and comparative performance theory. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 185-194. Keywords history, archiving, documentation, diaspora, embodiment › Composing a history: The British Asian theatre research project at Exeter, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 225-232. › ‘Discursive embodiment’: the theatre as adaptation, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 201-209. Julia Lippert Martin Luther University HalleWittenberg, English Studies Department, Dachritzstr. 12, Halle/Saale, 6099, Germany Dr. Julia Lippert is Executive Director at the Centre for United States Studies and assistant lecturer for pedagogy at the English Department at Martin Luther University Halle-Wittenberg. Her main research interests are in cognitive narratology across genres and media, theories of the mind, adaptation studies, film analysis and postmodern literature. Her most recent study on a cross-medial cognitive reading model for historio(bio)graphic texts will appeared in 2010 (with WVT). Keywords documentary, drama, media studies, history, television › Bennett's George III on the small screen: An inquiry into televisual adaptations of the past, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 141-155. Hugo Liu MIT, Media Laboratory, 20 Ames Street, 320D, Cambridge, MA 02139, United States of America Keywords culture, reflexivity, computing audience, identity, metaaudience, off-stage performance Hugo Liu is a researcher in media arts and sciences at MIT. Inspired by literary theory, informed by artificial intelligence, and rhizomous in method, he has established a research programme around the computation of self’s subconscious flows- points-of-view, aesthetics, attitudes, identity, and sense-of-humour. Cultural taste, time dilation, myth, and libido are his present topics. › Self-reflexive performance: dancing with the computed audience of culture, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 237-. Simon Lock University of Plymouth, School of Art & Media, B314 Portland Square, Drake Circus, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Simon Lock is currently working as a lecturer in System Dependability at Lancaster University, where he teaches courses on Critical Systems Engineering and System Dependability. In his work with BigDog Interactive, Simon is particularly interested in human–computer interaction in highly social spaces. He has also finished a six-year long project on socio-technical system dependability, with an EPSRC fund. Keywords interaction, technology, new media, games, performance › A support architecture for high dependability in digital performance andinstallation art, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 87-. Sharon Lockyer Brunel University, Sociology and Communications, School of Social Sciences, Brunel University, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords masculine discourses, ageing female body, self-deprecation, Joan Rivers, stand-up comedy, Sharon Lockyer is a Lecturer in Sociology and Communications at Brunel University, UK. She researches in the sociology of mediated culture and critical comedy studies. She is the editor of Reading Little Britain: Comedy Matters on Contemporary Television (Tauris 2010) and a co-editor (with Michael Pickering) of Beyond a Joke: the Limits of Humour (Palgrave 2005, 2009). She has published in a range of academic journals including Social Semiotics, Popular Communication: the International Journal of Media and Culture, Journalism Studies, International Journal of Social Research Methodology: Theory & Practice, Ethical Space: the International sexuality, gender Journal of Communication Ethics, and Discourse & Society. › From toothpick legs to dropping vaginas: Gender and sexuality in Joan Rivers’ stand-up comedy performance, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 113-123. › Analysing stand-up comedy, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 99-100. Mary Jo Lodge Lafayette College, Apt E, 907 George Street, Easton, PA, 18042, United States of America Mary Jo Lodge is an Assistant Professor of English and Theatre at Lafayette College in Easton, PA and is the Music Theatre and Dance Focus Group Representative for the Association for the Theatre in Higher Education. She holds a Ph.D. in Musical Theatre and is an active director, choreographer and performer. Keywords Scrubs, Xena, Buffy, television shows, Every Good Boy Deserves Favour › Beyond ‘Jumping the Shark’: the new television musical, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 293-306. › Special Theatrical Event: Every Good Boy Deserves Favour, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 213-218. Gica Loening University of Edinburgh, Institute for Music in Human and Social Development (IMHSD), Alison House, 12 Nicolson Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9DF, United Kingdom Gica Loening is a freelance community musician and researcher, currently tutoring on the Scots Music Group’s Inspire project. She also coordinates and tutors Edinburgh’s ‘Fun Fiddle’ group. She obtained an MSc. in Music in the Community at Edinburgh University in 2008, and has since been engaged as a researcher on several community music research projects. She is a founder member of The Belle Star Band and Celter Schmelter. Keywords 'Fun Fiddle', community music, Scottish education › Community music knowledge exchange research in Scottish higher education, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 133-146. Alys Longley University of Auckland, National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries, 26 Symonds Street, Auckland, New Zealand Keywords poetic methodology, choreography Alys Longley is a lecturer in Dance at Auckland University; she has recently submitted a Practice-Led Ph.D. study that asks ‘How might language crease and fold from dance experience?’ This has led to the creation of the Kinesthetic Archive Project, involving a solo performance, an artist's book, a sound archive and a critical essay. This study currently merges poetic methodologies and choreography, drawing on the practices and writings of dance maker Simone Forti and philosopher Brian Massumi. Recent interdisciplinary choreographies include Kinesthetic Archive (TAPAC, NZ 2006); Camper (Tempo Dance Festival 2007); and Suture (Maidment Theatre, NZ 2006). › Design, digital gestures and the in[ter]ference of meaning: Reframing technology's role within design and place through performative gesture, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 5-22. Rebecca Loukes University of Exeter, Department of Drama, College of Humanities, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Rebecca Loukes is a performer and co-founder of RedCape Theatre. She trained in the body awareness practices of Elsa Gindler with Eva Schmale and Charlotte Selver, and Asian martial/meditation arts with Phillip Zarrilli. She is a senior lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter, where she writes and teaches around practices and histories of performer training, acting and contemporary performance. Keywords history of somatic practices, Elsa Gindler, Charlotte Selver, Carola Speads, Elaine Summers › Elaine Summers and Kinetic Awareness: Part 2 Interview with Elaine Summers, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 91-101. › Elaine Summers and Kinetic Awareness: Part 1, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 75-89. Katharine Low Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords theatre and performance, applied theatre, sexual health, South Africa, HIV/AIDS Katharine Low is a practice-based Ph.D. student in the Drama department at the University of Manchester, supervised by James Thompson and Jenny Hughes. Through her research project, ‘our place, our stage’ (OPOS), she is exploring the role of applied theatre in sexual and reproductive health communication in the Nyanga township in South Africa, focusing in particular on concepts of spatiality, risktaking and resistance. › Creating a space for the individual: Different theatre and performance-based approaches to sexual health communication in South Africa, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 111-126. Victoria Lowe University of Manchester, 83 Foxbench Walk, Manchester, M21 7RE, United Kingdom Victoria Lowe is a lecturer in Drama and Screen Studies at the University of Manchester, UK. Her Ph.D. thesis, ‘The matinee idol and the false beard’ (2004) examined the relationship between performance and stardom in British Cinema in the 1930s. She is currently conducting research into the actor’s voice in British Cinema. Keywords theatre, British arts, stardom, voice › Robert Donat: reflections on stage and screen acting in 1930s Britain, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 225-237. Michael J. Lowis Keywords music, emotion, peak experiences, spiritual, experiment Dr. Michael Lowis is a chartered psychologist, and currently Visiting Fellow, Occupational Sciences, The University of Northampton. His research interests include the psychology of music, the psychology of humour, and life satisfaction in the later years. He is the author of over 70 academic papers and conference presentations, and is called upon by the media from time to time for specialist opinion. He is also an amateur musician. › Emotional responses to music listening: A review of some previous research and an original, five-phase study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 8192. › Engagement in the arts and well-being and health in later adulthood: An empirical study, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 25-36. Mary Luckhurst University of York, Department of Theatre, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD, United Kingdom Keywords creative writing, contemporary drama, Caryl Churchill Mary Luckhurst is Professor of Modern Drama and co-founder of the new Department of Theatre, Film and Television at the University of York. She is the Principle Investigator of a three-year HEA-funded project engaged in the exchange of research and teaching methods between universities and conservatoires. She has written nine books ranging on subjects from acting, directing, creative writing, dramaturgy and celebrity. She has written many articles on contemporary drama and is currently writing a book on Caryl Churchill. › Ethical stress andperforming real people, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 135-152. Chee-Hoo Lum Nanyang Technological University, Visual and Performing Arts Academic Group, National Institute of Education, 1 Nanyang Walk, 637616, Singapore Chee-Hoo Lum completed his doctorate in Music Education at the University of Washington under an overseas graduate scholarship from NTU-NIE (Nanyang Technological University – National Institute of Education), and had previously been awarded the Lee Kuan Yew and the Association of Nanyang University Graduates gold medals. He is currently Assistant Professor of Music Education at the National Institute of Education, Singapore and is the director of the UNESCONIE Centre for arts research in education, part of a region-wide Keywords health, therapy, reminiscence therapy, senior citizens, memory, community music, ageing network of observatories stemming from the UNESCO Asia-Pacific action plan. He is also an associate editor of the International Journal of Education and the Arts. His primary research interest in music education focuses on children’s musical cultures and their shifting musical identities; the use of media and technology by children, in families and in pedagogy; creativity and improvisation in children’s music; elementary music methods; and world › Reflective dialogues in community music engagement: An exploratory experience in a Singapore nursing home and day-care centre for senior citizens, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 185-197. Tiel Lundy University of Colorado Denver, English, Campus Box 175, P.O. Box 173364, Denver, Colorado, United States of America Keywords American culture, film studies, adaptation, ethnic studies, material culture Dr. Tiel Lundy is Instructor of Literature and Film at the University of Colorado Denver. Her research interests include late-nineteenthcentury American literature, ethnic studies and film studies. She has published articles on Charles Chesnutt, Henry James and Jane Campion, and is currently at work on a project on fashion and film. › Mired in desire: Jane Campion's Portrait of erotics, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 211-222. Sun Luyi Sun Luyi has a Ph.D. in Arts, and she is the former Vice-President of the Open University of China (specialist in distance education). The Open University of China, President Office, No. 160 Fuxingmennei Street, Beijing, 100031, China › Communication and responsibility: Open universities in China and community music education, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 15-21. Keywords distance education, community music Sophia Lycouris University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh College of Art - Graduate School, Lauriston Place, Edinburgh, EH3 9DF, United Kingdom Dr. Sophia Lycouris is Director of the Graduate Research School at the Edinburgh College of Art (Edinburgh, UK). Her research is concerned with the use of interactive technologies in interdisciplinary choreographic projects and the role of choreographic approaches in interdisciplinary projects which address issues of movement in the social and public space. Keywords architecture, interactivity, urban space, 4D design, complex systems › An approach to the design of interactive environments, with reference to choreography, architecture, the science of complex systems and 4D design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 281-. Esther MacCallumStewart University of Chichester, Media Studies, 98 Rugby Road, Brighton, East Sussex, BN1 6ED, United Kingdom Keywords MMORPGs, online culture, virtual worlds, science fiction, gender studies, World of Warcraft, The Lord of the Rings, social narratives, internet, games, digital culture Dr. Esther MacCallum-Stewart is Research Fellow at SMARTlab, the University of Dublin, and Lecturer at the University of Chichester. She is an expert in online communities, role play and gaming, and has written extensively about the forms of interaction that develop online between communities of players. Her research investigates digital narratives, and in particular the relationship between communities and the narratives they create for themselves in games, online resources and interactive media. She is interested in roleplay, storytelling and social relationships as aspects of play within virtual spaces. Esther's most recently edited books include Lord of the Rings Online (with Tanya Kryzwinska and Justin Parsler, both University of Brunel, March 2012), and on the theme of Love in Games (with Jessica Enevold, University of Lund, forthcoming Autumn 2012). She is also writing her own book on social narrative and online communities. She lectures in Games › The warfare of the imagined – building identities in Second Life, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 197208. James MacDonald University of Exeter, Department of Drama Keywords disability, displacement, East European diaspora, comedy, grotesque James MacDonald is a playwright and Research Fellow in Drama at the University of Exeter. His 'collected' plays have been published in three volumes, As Russia Goes (Studies in Theatre and Performance Supplement 2000), Russia, Freaks and Foreigners (Intellect 2008) and Carnival Texts (Intellect 2011). Individually published plays include Countryside, New Theatre Publications, Balance Is Stillness, together with an interview, in Peering behind the Curtain, ed. Thomas Fahy and Kimball King (Routledge 2002) and the one-act Crippled Ruth in Two Short Plays (STP Supplement 1996). › Anthony Creighton and John Osborne, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 265-266. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 233-243. › How I came to write my first play, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 355-356. › The Virtue of Living a Lie, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 289- 303. Claire MacDonald University of the Arts, London, Southampton Row, London, WC1B 4AP, United Kingdom Keywords voice, process, poetry, performance, pedagogy Dr. Claire MacDonald is the Director of the International Centre for Fine Art Research at the University of the Arts, London. A founder of two British visual theatre companies, she writes for performance, has recently completed a novel, is a founding editor of Performance Research and a contributing editor to PAJ, a journal of performance and art, in New York. In 2006 she initiated ‘The Space Between Words’, a writing network for performance writing, and in September 2008 she co-curated, with Claire Hind, the international writing symposium ‘Writing Encounters’ at York St. John University. › In Bed, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 59-62. › Conducting the flow: Dramaturgy and writing, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 91-100. Ana Gabriela Macedo Universidade do Minho, Portugal, Departamento de Estudos Ingleses e Norte Americanos, Instituto de Letras e Ciências Humanas, Campus de Gualtar, Braga, 4710-057, Portugal Keywords translation, revision, intertextuality, literature, feminism Ana Gabriela Macedo is a Professor of English Literature and Director of the Humanities Research Centre at Universidade do Minho in Braga, Portugal. A co-editor of Identity and Cultural Translation (Peter Lang, 2006) and Portuguese Dictionary of Feminist Criticism (Porto, Ed. Afrontamento, 2005), amongst others, she has published extensively in the field of women's writing, feminism and visual culture. She is a translator of Sylvia Plath's poetry into Portuguese, and her monograph on Paula Rego (entitled Paula Rego e o Poder da Visão) is forthcoming (Lisbon, Ed. Cotovia). › After Mrs. Rochester: Rewriting as re-vision, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 271-289. Ben Macpherson University of Winchester, Faculty of the Arts, Hampshire, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords somatic performance, interdisciplinary frameworks Ben Macpherson is a Ph.D. student at the University of Winchester, UK. His research focuses on interdisciplinary frameworks for negotiating texts in performance, post-structural theory, and somatic performance theory. He is a composer/lyricist of works including The Eighth Square, and has contributed to several UK and Canadian Performing Arts projects as musical theatre consultant. › Book Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 309-324. › ‘Eliza, where the devil are my songs?’:negotiating voice, text and performance analysis in Rex Harrison’s Henry Higgins, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 235-244. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 311-319. Michael Takeo Magruder Michael Takeo Magruder is an artist and researcher based in King’s Visualisation Lab (KVL), located in the Department of Digital Humanities, King’s College London. His practice explores concepts ranging from media criticism and aesthetic journalism to digital formalism and computational aesthetics, deploying information age technologies and systems to examine our networked, media-rich world. His projects have been showcased in over 200 exhibitions in 30 countries, including Manifesta 8: The European Biennial of Contemporary Art, Murcia; the Courtauld Institute of Art, London; EAST International 2005, Norwich; Georges Pompidou Center, Paris; Tokyo Metropolitan Museum of Photography, Japan; and TransMedia-Akademie, Hellerau. His work has been funded by the Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Arts Council England and The National Endowment for the Arts, USA, and he has been commissioned by numerous public galleries in the United Kingdom and abroad. King’s College London, Department of Digital Humanities, King’s Visualisation Lab, Strand, London, WC2R 2LS, United Kingdom Keywords media criticism, aesthetic journalism digital formalism, computational aesthetics › Transitional space(s): Creation, collaboration and improvisation within shared virtual/physical environments, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 189-204. Roger Mantie Boston University, Music Education, 272 Cherry Street, West Newton, MA, 2465, United States of America Keywords Foucault, discourse analysis, school music, lifelong music-making, music education Roger Mantie is an active scholar at Boston University with interests in curriculum, ethics, discourse analysis, jazz education, lifelong participation in music, philosophy, school bands, social justice, teacher education, and Michel Foucault. He has published in Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, Canadian Music Educator, Canadian Winds, Critical Studies in Improvisation, International Journal of Community Music, Music Education Research, and has two chapters in the book Exploring Social Justice: How Music Education Might Matter. Prior to his appointment at Boston University, Roger taught instrumental music in Manitoba, directed jazz ensembles and taught improvisation at Brandon University. › Closing the gap: does music-making have to stop upon graduation?, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 217-227. Sudesh Mantillake University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka, Fine Arts, Department of Fine Arts, Faculty of Arts, Peradeniya, 20400, Sri Lanka Sudesh Mantillake is a lecturer in the Department of Fine Arts at the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka. He is a dancer and a choreographer. Apart from Sri Lankan dance, he has studied Indian, Latin American and Western dance forms. Sudesh has a BA in Fine Arts from the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka and an MSc in Communication Science from the University of Lugano, Switzerland. Keywords Kandyan dance, dance, performances, semiotics, cultural heritage management, culture, communication › Ves näţuma, a common dance type in Kandyan dance of Sri Lanka: a semiotic analysis of selected features with a brief introduction to the relevant approaches of Indian and Western semiotics, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 187-192. Peter Marteinson University of Toronto, French Keywords epistemology, ontology, social being, comedy, laughter, semiotics Professor Peter Marteinson is a Canadian researcher educated at the International School of Brussels (Belgium), the University of Toronto (Canada) and the Ecole Normale Supérieure (Paris). His doctorate in French on the aesthetics of comedy (1998) was the inspiration for his later English-language book-length study of laughter in general: On the Problem of the Comic, Legas Press, Ottawa, Canada (2006). He lives in Toronto, Canada, where he teaches, writes and co-edits the University of Toronto learned journal Sémiotique appliqué/Applied Semiotics with Professor Pascal Michelucci. › Thoughts on the current state of humour theory, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 173180. Yasutaka Maruki Pacific University, World Languages and Literatures Department, 2043 College Way, Forest Grove, Oregon, 97124, United States of America Keywords jo-ha-kyu, waki, T. S. Eliot, Zeami Yasutaka Maruki is an Assistant Professor at the Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon, where he teaches in the World Languages and Literature Department. He holds a Ph.D. in Comparative Literary & Cultural Studies from the University of Connecticut, 2006, entitled 'Theater of Eternity: Zeami and Anton Chekhov'. He also has a MA from Towson University. his research intersts are the Japanese Language, Noh and Anime (Sci-Fi). He is co-author of the book Bugen: Dancing Illusion of Noh (Tokyo: Being Net Press, 2010). › A fusion of drama and religion: A study of Mugen Noh in Thomas Becket, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 187-201. Mogomme Masoga University of South Africa, The Department of Art History, Visual Arts and Musicology, Sunnyside Campus, Building 12C, P O Box 392, Unisa, 3, South Africa Mogomme Masoga is a researcher at the Department of Musicology, University of South Africa and with the DBSA (Development Bank of Southern Africa), Research Unit (Midrand, Gauteng Province, in South Africa). His research interests include: indigenous knowledge systems; building sustainable communities; African musicology (African drumming); dance and drama performance; sacred sites and landscaping; and identity construction at selected sacred sites. Keywords ritual, healing, music, community › Lenyalo la Badimo (The Wedding of Ancestors): Music in familial and community healing rituals, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 85-89. Vuyisile Mathiti Parliament, Labour Relations Unit, PO Box 15, Cape Town, 8000, South Africa Keywords juvenile offenders, music education, law, mentors, Africa Vuyisile Mathiti taught in the Department of Psychology at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa at both undergraduate and postgraduate levels. He has partnered with various organizations and Universities in the United States on community projects such as diversion of juvenile offenders, HIV/AIDS risk reduction counseling and the training of HIV/AIDS Lay counselors. He served on the Editorial Board of the journal, Article 19. He is currently managing the Wellness Programme of the Parliament of the Republic of South Africa. › South Africa, the arts and youth in conflict with the law, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 69-88. Gerard Matte Gerard Matte teaches drama and politics at Australian Catholic University. Australian Catholic University, Locked Bag 4115, Fitzroy, Victoria, 3065, Australia Keywords anguage, taboos, audiences, performance, politeness strategies, humour theory, Joan Rivers, comedy › Can we talk? The reframing of social permissions in the comedy of Joan Rivers, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 161-171. Ewa Mazierska University of Central Lancashire, School of Journalism, Media and Communication, Harrington Building 244, Preston, Lancashire, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Keywords travel, post-communism, capitalism, disappointment, Poland Ewa Mazierska is Professor of Contemporary Cinema at the School of Journalism, Media and Communication, University of Central Lancashire, UK. Her publications include over ten monographs and edited collections in Polish and English concerning various aspects of European cinema, including Nabokov's Cinematic Afterlife (McFarland, 2011), Jerzy Skolimowski: The Cinema of a Nonconformist (Berghahn, 2010), Masculinities in Polish, Czech and Slovak Cinema (Berghahn, 2008), Crossing New Europe: The European Road Movie (Wallflower Press, 2006, co-author Laura Rascaroli), and Pasja: Filmy Jean-Luca Godarda (Ha!art, 2010). › Escape into a different person, escape into a different reality: Despair by Vladimir Nabokov and RainerWerner Fassbinder, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 29-42. Marie McCarthy University of Michigan, School of Music, Theatre & Dance, E.V. Moore Building, 1100 Baits Dr., Ann Arbor, MI, 48109-2085, United States of America Marie McCarthy is Professor and Chair of Music Education at the University of Michigan. Her research explores the historical and sociocultural foundations of music education. Her second book, Toward a Global Community: The International Society for Music Education, 1953–2003, was published to mark the 50th anniversary of the Society and includes a history of the Commission on Community Music Activity. Keywords community music, The International Society for Music Education, ISME, Commission for Community Music Activity › The Community Music Activity Commission of ISME, 1982–2007: A forum for global dialogue and institutional formation, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 39-48. Christopher McCullough Christopher is Emeritus Professor of Theatre at the University of University of Exeter, Drama Department, Arts, Languages and Literature, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Exeter. His published work and theatrical practice as a director, have focused primarily, but not exclusively, on the dissemination of sixteenth and seventeenth century stage practices and early twentieth century European political theatre. The new research interest to which he aspires is a study of the stage practices emanating from the theatrical adaptation of Gothic novels. Keywords art, post-impressionism, poetry › Harley Granville Barker: A very English avant-garde, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 223-236. Gordon McDougall Drastic Action, Oxford House, Temple Cloud, Bristol, Somerset, BS39 5BW, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, unconscious, dream Gordon McDougall is an internationally-known theatre director and academic. He has been Artistic Director of the Traverse Theatre (196668), Granada TV’s Stables Theatre (1968-71), the Oxford Playhouse Company (1974-84) and the Citadel Theatre, Edmonton, Canada (1984-87). From 1996 to 2001 he was Principal of the Guildford School of Acting and then became Director of Drama at the University of Oklahoma. He was twice nominated by London critics as Best Director and his productions have been seen all over Britain and in fifteen foreign countries. He has worked extensively at RADA and for Granada Television and has taught at over a dozen universities in Europe and the Americas. He currently runs a consultancy company, Drastic Action. › Theatrical truth: the dialogue between audience and performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.2, 107-117. › Theatre and the unconscious: the three-dimensional dream, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.2, 107-116. Ian McFadyen Media Arts Corporation Australia, 36 Network Drive, Wynnum, Queensland, 4178, Australia Ian McFadyen is a writer, actor and producer of film and television. › Can we talk? The reframing of social permissions in the comedy of Joan Rivers, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 161-171. Keywords language, taboos, audiences, performance, politeness strategies, humour theory, Joan Rivers, comedy Phillip McIntyre University of Newcastle, School of DCIT, ICT Building, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, 2308, Australia Phillip McIntyre is a songwriter, record producer, engineer, music journalist and academic. He teaches Media Production and Media Studies courses in communication at the University of Newcastle NSW, Australia, where he researches creativity and cultural production. Keywords creative process, art, practitioner, documentary › Rethinking the creative process: The systems model of creativity applied to popular songwriting, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 7790. Kara McKechnie University of Leeds, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords The Flying Dutchman, Calixto Bieito, Stuttgart State Opera, interpretation, semiotics Kara McKechnie is a Lecturer in Dramaturgy and Literary Management at the University of Leeds. She has a professional background in opera and gained her MA from the University of Heidelberg, Germany. She has worked extensively on Alan Bennett (Ph.D. 2004), specifically in the field of television drama (Alan Bennett, The Television Series, Manchester University Press 2007). She teaches and publishes on adaptation, intermediality and new writing, and has recently been working with Opera North, both within the University of Leeds partnership with the company, and as a freelance dramaturg. › Detached signifiers, dead babies and demon dwarves: Bieito's Dutchman, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 101-108. Joslin McKinney University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Joslin McKinney is lecturer in Scenography in the School of Performance and Cultural Industries at the University of Leeds, UK. Her practice-led research investigates the nature of the communication that occurs when audiences encounter design for the stage. Recent work includes ‘Projection and Transaction: The spatial operation of scenography’ Performance Research 10(4) 2005. Keywords design process, interdisciplinarity, play, embodied knowing, responsiveness › Emergent objects: Designing through performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 269-280. Dermott Mcmeel University of Auckland, National Institute of Creative Arts and Industries, 26 Symonds Street, Auckland, New Zealand Keywords architecture, robotics, digital media, locative media Dermott McMeel's research is primarily conducted within the discipline of architecture. However, there is increasing interaction between architecture, robotics, information sciences and art. With an interest in the social, collaborative, experiential and philosophical implications of digital media, he seeks to advance the discussion on the influence of technology in both the design/making process and in occupying the built environment. His current research has a focus on locative media and the effect of GPS and mobile phones on the ‘craft’ of design and construction, in both commercial and educational contexts. Dermott is lecturer in Digital Design at the University of Auckland in New Zealand. › Design, digital gestures and the in[ter]ference of meaning: Reframing technology's role within design and place through performative gesture, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 5-22. Emma Meehan Trinity College, Drama Department, Dublin, Ireland Keywords body image, Joan Davis, somatic practices Emma Meehan is a performer and researcher whose interest focuses on physical approaches to performance. She has recently completed her doctoral research at the Drama Department, Trinity College on the work of Irish choreographer and dancer Joan Davis. Her research was supported by Trinity College Dublin and The Irish Department of Arts, Sport and Tourism. She is currently teaching part-time at the Drama Department in Trinity College and developing a new performance piece on body image. › Visuality, discipline and somatic practices: The ‘Maya Lila’ performance project of Joan Davis, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 219-232. Robert Meffe Keywords Broadway, Les Misérables, keyboard Robert Meffe has been a professional music director in New York City since 1991. On Broadway he was Associate Conductor for Little Women and the last six years of the run of Les Misérables. He was Music Director for the national tour of The Phantom of the Opera and has played keyboards for Mamma Mia!, Hairspray, Avenue Q, The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee, Grey Gardens and Bombay Dreams. Mr Meffe holds a Bachelors Degree in Pre-Medical Studies and Music from the University of Notre Dame and a MA in Choral Conducting from the University of Cincinnati College-Conservatory of Music. Currently an Assistant Professor at Pace University, Meffe is the Director of Music for the BFA program in Musical Theater. › How many musicians does it take? A history and analysis of the shrinking Broadway pit orchestra, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 99-115. Maria Mendona Kenyon College, Music and Anthropology Departments, Storer Hall, Gambier, Ohio, 43022, United States of America Keywords education, gamelan, rehabilitation, music, prison Maria Mendona is Assistant Professor in Asian Music and Culture in the Music and Anthropology Departments at Kenyon College. Her research interests include Indonesian music (particularly gamelan traditions of Java and Sunda), globalization of culture, and music and prisons. She has worked as an ethnomusicologist in a variety of settings in the United States and the United Kingdom, including Ethnomusicology Editor for the 2001 edition of The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, as well as advising and leading projects involving gamelan performance and education for a range of British arts institutions, including the South Bank Centre, St David’s Hall, Cardiff, and the Hallé Orchestra. › Prison, music and the rehabilitation revolution: The case of Good Vibrations, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 295-307. Nancy Menning University of Iowa, Department of Religious Studies, 314 Gilmore Hall, Iowa City, IA 52242, United States of America Nancy Menning has a Ph.D. from the Department of Religious Studies at the University of Iowa, with a specialty in ethics. She is a graduate of the National Instructor Training Institute of Temple University’s Inside-Out Prison Exchange Program, which encourages partnerships between institutions of higher learning and correctional systems in order to offer transformative learning experiences in prison contexts. Keywords prison choirs, New Zealand, Maori, biculturalism, art › Singing with conviction: New Zealand prisons and Maori populations, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 111-120. Usha Menon University College London, UCL Elizabeth Garrett Institute for Women’s Health, Maple House, 149 Tottenham Court Road, London, WC1T 7DN, United Kingdom Usha Menon is Professor of Gynaecological Cancer and Head of the Gynaecological Cancer Research Centre at UCL Institute for Women’s Health, and Consultant Gynaecologist for UCLH NHS Trust, London. She is principal investigator on the UK ovarian cancer screening trials. › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Keywords art therapy, gynaecology, well-being measures Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe University of Lincoln, Lincoln School of Performing Arts, Brayford Pool, Lincoln, Lincolnshire, LN6 7TS, United Kingdom Keywords consciousness studies, theatre, television studies Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe studied English and Philosophy at the Universität Düsseldorf, Germany, trained as a teacher, worked as manager of a computer software company, taught Literature and Philosophy in Norway (1989-1991) and German at various schools in London. In 1994 he obtained his Ph.D. at the Department of Drama, Theatre and Media Arts, Royal Holloway, University of London. His thesis on Consciousness and the Actor was published by Peter Lang (Frankfurt, 1996). From 1994 to 2007 he was a lecturer and senior lecturer in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television Studies, University of Wales Aberystwyth. Since October 2007 he has been Professor of Drama at the Lincoln School of Performing Arts, University of Lincoln. For Routledge he edited Who’s Who in Contemporary World Theatre, and published Approaches to Acting, Past and Present with Continuum in 2001. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.2, 165-. Vida. L. Midgelow University of Northampton, School of the Arts, Avenue Campus, St. Georges Ave, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Keywords embodied knowing, articulation, Practice-as-Research (PaR), The Choreographic Lab Dr. Vida. L. Midgelow is Reader in Dance and Performance at The University of Northampton, UK. Her research activities cross between PaR and written modes of articulation and analysis. She has particular interests in improvisation, creative methodologies, documenting performance and dance analysis. Her book, Reworking the ballet: Counter Narratives and Alternative Bodies, was published by Routledge in 2007. In the same year the poetic and playful, TRACE: Improvisation in a box, was published. For these projects she received funding from AHRC and Arts Council England. Dr. Midgelow is codirector of ‘The Choreographic Lab’. In addition, she serves on the executive board of ‘The Society of Dance History Scholars’ (USA) and is currently Chair of the ‘Standing Conference on Dance in Higher Education’. › Articulating choreographic practices, locating the field: An introduction, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 3-19. Tim Miles University of Surrey, Guildford, Surrey, GU2 7XH, United Kingdom Keywords Northern Ireland, The Troubles, Gary Mitchell, Sigmund Freud, Henri Bergson, stand-up comedy, humour Tim is currently based at the University of Surrey, in both the Department of English, and the Department of Dance, Film and Theatre. He has taught at all undergraduate levels, at five UK universities. In addition,he has four years experience as a research supervisor (at Royal Holloway International). › Playing cricket shots in my mind: Cricket and the drama of Harold Pinter, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 17-31. › ‘Pack up your troubles and smile, smile, smile’: comic plays about the legacy of ‘the Troubles’, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 43-59. › Sex, pies and Jilly Cooper:An online, cooperativeanalysis of humourand the erotic, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 63-71. Derek Miller Stanford University, 1801 Rose St. #6, Berkeley, CA 94703, United States of America Keywords Oklahoma!, Jewish studies, community, Rodgers and Hammerstein Derek Miller is a graduate student researching musical theatre, particularly Rodgers & Hammerstein. He is interested in the musical as an American cultural export and as a lingua franca among American performers. As an actor, he has studied at Boston University, the Atlantic Theatre Company, and with Anne Bogart and SITI Company. He has appeared onstage at Williamstown, the New York Fringe Festival, Columbia University and in numerous productions at Yale, from which he graduated with a BA in English. › ‘Underneath the ground’: Jud and the community in Oklahoma!, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 163-174. Ray Miller Appalachian State University, Theatre and Dance, Chapell Wilson, Boone, North Carolina, N.C. 28608, United States of America Keywords musical theatre, choreography, dance aesthetics, pedagogy Dr. Miller has directed and/or choreographed over 200 musicals, operas, plays and/or dance concerts. He has delivered papers on topics ranging from musical theatre and dance aesthetics to pedagogy and theatre history at conferences held by the Congress on Research in Dance, the Association for Theatre in Higher Education, Writing Across the Curriculum, American Society for Theatre Research, Southern Humanities, Dance History Scholars, Centre National de la Danse and other academic conferences. His work has been published in Dance Research Journal, Theatre Journal, Text and Performance Quarterly and Dance Chronicle. Praeger Press will publish his book on the history of musical theatre dance on the American stage. In addition to serving as a faculty member in the Department of Theatre and Dance and as a faculty development associate for the Hubbard Center, Dr. Miller also serves as the President for › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 343-349. Brett Mills University of East Anglia, School of Film and Television Studies, University of East Anglia, NR4 7TJ, UK Brett Mills is Head of the School of Film and Television Studies, University of East Anglia. He is the author of Television Sitcom (BFI, 2005) and The Sitcom (Edinburgh, 2009) and co-author of Reading Media Theory: Thinkers, Approaches, Context (Pearson, 2009). He is currently undertaking the three-year AHRC-funded project, Make Me Laugh: Creativity in the British Television Comedy Industry. Keywords textual analysis, pleasure, humour theory, Joan Rivers, stand-up comedy › ‘A pleasure working with you’: Humour theory and Joan Rivers, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 151-160. › Analysing stand-up comedy, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 99-100. Frank Millward Kingston University, Knights Park, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT1 2QJ, United Kingdom Keywords synaesthesia, nonlinear Frank Millward is an academic whose practice-as-research includes extensive and diverse outputs exhibited in a variety of forms: largescale site-specific: Dining With Alice (Artichoke 2011 & 1999), Used To Be Slime (Glasgow 2010); digital media: Uneasy Dreams (DVD 2011); performance: From Anger To Sadness (NRLA 2009); music works: solo piano 1, 2 and 3 (series) – timelines for DJ and Orchestra systems, multimedia art, sonic art, improvisation (published by Wirripang). He has received major international grants and awards from The Australian Research Council, The Australia Council, The Arts Council UK as well as from publishers, festivals and corporate sponsors. His research explores cross-disciplinary connections between technology, science and art where sound and moving image are used to shape new interactive forms in live performance. As principal lecturer, Millward teaches digital media, audio-visual editing, sonic arts and supervises Ph.D. › Visiosonics – Developing moving images in direct response to sound – improvising with technology, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 171-188. John Milton University of São Paolo, Department of Modern Languages and Literatures, São Paolo, Brazil Keywords representation, transfer, transmission, factory translation, recreation Dr. John Milton teaches English Literature and Translation Studies at the University of São Paulo, Brazil. He is the author of O Poder da Traducao (The Power of Translation), which wasrepublished as Traducao: Teoria e Pratica (Translation: Theory and Practice); O Clube do Livro e a Traducao (The Clube do Livro and Translation) and Images of a Trembling World, a travel book on Japan. He has also edited (with Paul Bandia) Agents of Translation. › Between the cat and the devil: Adaptation Studies and Translation Studies, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 47-64. Márta Minier University of Glamorgan, Department of Drama and Music, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Atrium, Adam Street, Cardiff, Wales, CF24 2XF, United Kingdom Dr. Márta Minier is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Glamorgan. Her publications have appeared in journals and collections including, Gramma, The Anachronist, New Voices in Irish Criticism and the European Intertexts series (Peter Lang). › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 161-170. › Adaptation, Translation, Multimediality:A Hungarian Bestseller Across Cultures, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 191-204. Keywords Irish criticism, Drama studies, multimediality › EDITORIAL, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 113-114. Rick Mitchell An award-winning dramatist of over twenty plays, Rick Mitchell teaches playwriting, performance studies, and literature at California California State University, Department of English, 18111 Nordhoff Street, Northridge, California, CA 91326-8248, United States of America State University, Northridge, where he is Professor of English. Other plays carried by Intellect include Brecht in L.A. and The Composition of Herman Melville. Mitchell lives in Los Angeles. › Composing Herman Melville: performing history through the presence of the now, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.2, 83-95. Keywords The Confidence Man, Karl Marx, Benjamin Franklin, modernity, riverboat Roberta Mock University of Plymouth, School of Humanities and Performing Arts, Plymouth, Devon, PL4 8AA, United Kingdom Keywords research, SCUDD, theatre, AHRB Roberta Mock is Professor of Performance Studies and the Director of the Arts and Humanities Doctoral Training Centre at the University of Plymouth. Between 1996 and 2006, she directed and performed with Lusty Juventus physical theatre. Her books include Jewish Women on Stage, Film and Television; Performance, Embodiment and Cultural Memory (as co-editor with Colin Counsell); and Walking, Writing and Performance: Autobiographical Texts by Deirdre Heddon, Carl Lavery and Phil Smith (as editor). She is also the editor of Intellect’s Playtext series and is currently writing a book entitled Doing Performance Research, with Baz Kershaw and Gillian Hadley, for Palgrave Macmillan. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.2, 129-. › Pedagogies of Theatre (Arts) and Performance (Studies), Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 201-214. › Really Jewish? Joan Rivers Live at the Apollo, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 101111. Tony Moon Tony Moon is an award-wining film-maker and academic working at Southampton Solent University. He lectures in documentary, drama production and scriptwriting. He is also the author of Down by the Jetty, the authorised biography of the beat group Dr.Feelgood. Keywords Gumshoe, Mr. Saturday Night, The Entertainer, stand-up comedy › Spotlight kids: The depiction of stand-up comedians in fictional drama: film, television and theatre, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 201-208. › Scenes in the House ofComedy: Interview withStewart Lee, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 5-12. › Up and down with Barry Cryer: From an interview conducted on 22 July 2011, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 173-178. James Mooney University of Leeds, School of Music, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords auditory awareness, sonic environment, post-modernism, modernism, memetics James Mooney's current research interests include scientific and design-led research in music; auditory awareness and the sonic environment; music technology; multi-loudspeaker sound spatialisation; cultural history, modernism and post-modernism; open source software and hardware; free improvisation; applied electroacoustic composition; music, memetics and consciousness. › Frameworks and affordances:Understanding the toolsof music-making, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 141-154. Tracey Moore Florida International University, Head of Voice & Movement, Theatre Department, UP Campus, PAC 131, 11200 SW 8th Street, Miami, Florida, FL 33199, United States of America Keywords microphones, monitors, Broadway, Wesley Balk, Stanislavski, musical theatre Tracey Moore is head of the Musical Theatre Bachelor of Fine Arts at Western Kentucky University (WKU) where she directs and teaches. Her book, Acting the Song, was published in 2008 by Allworth Press. Before academia, Tracey was a professional actress and singer in New York for nearly twenty years. The ‘Before Broadway’ series at WKU, where new musicals are presented in a staged-reading format with the writers in residence, is in its third year. Previous productions include a re-telling of the Cinderella story by John Thomas Oaks called Chipper and a true story of a murderer brought to justice by Clay Zambo and Susan Murray called Greenbrier Ghost. › Teaching the Broadway singing style, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 85-96. › The out-of-town tryout goes back to school, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 303-309. Adrian Moore Sheffield University, Music Department, Jessop Building, 34 Leavygreave Road, Sheffield, S3 7RD, United Kingdom Keywords music technology, electroacoustic music, signal processing, human–computer interaction Dr. Adrian Moore is a senior lecturer in the Department of Music at the University of Sheffield. He is a composer of electroacoustic music and is the director of the University of Sheffield Sound Studios. His research interests are focused towards the development of the acousmatic tradition in electroacoustic music, the performance of electroacoustic music, signal processing and human–computer interaction in music. His music has been commissioned by the Groupe de Recherches Musicales (GRM), the Institute International de Musique Electroacoustique de Bourges (IMEB) and the Arts Council of England. › Adapting to change: working with digital sound using open source software in a teaching and learning environment, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 113-120. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.1, 75-81. Dave Moore The University of Sheffield, Western Bank, Sheffield, S10 2TN, United Kingdom Keywords music technology, sound diffusion, computer programming Dr. Dave Moore is the studio manager at the University of Sheffield. He is a computer programmer and developer. He completed his Ph.D. in 2003 based around two software prototypes for sound diffusion and currently teaches undergraduate and postgraduate music technology. His interest in open source software led to the free publication of the software ‘Resound’ online. › Adapting to change: working with digital sound using open source software in a teaching and learning environment, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 113-120. Nick Moran Central School of Speech and Drama, Embassy Theatre, Eton Avenue, London, NW3 3HY, United Kingdom Keywords projected image, audiences, stage design, screen Nick Moran has over 25 years of experience in design and production for theatre, opera and large-scale events. His lighting design work was included in Collaborators, an exhibition of contemporary theatre design at the Victoria and Albert Museum in 2007-08, and at the Word Stage Design exhibition in Seoul (2009). He has a BSc in Physics and, in 2001, gained an MA in Modern Drama and Performance through part time study. In 2003, he joined Central School as lecturer in lighting and, in 2005, became Design for Performance pathway leader for the Theatre Practice BA. Publications include Performance Lighting Design (A&C Black London 2007), and regular contributions to , the magazine of the ALD. › Resisting the lure of the screen, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 77-88. Nikki Moran Edinburgh University, Institute for Music in Human and Social Development (IMHSD), Alison House, 12 Nicolson Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9DF, United Kingdom Nikki Moran is a lecturer in Music at the Edinburgh University, where she researches music as social interaction. Nikki teaches at undergraduate and postgraduate level, including courses on the MSc. in Music in the Community. › Community music knowledge exchange research in Scottish higher education, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 133-146. Keywords community music, music education, social interaction Joe Moran Dance Art Foundation, Unit 15, Toynbee Studios, 28 Commercial Street, London, E1 6AB, United Kingdom Joe Moran is a dance artist and artistic director of Dance Art Foundation. He creates dance and video works for theatres, galleries and public spaces and is currently touring his adaptation of At Once, the new solo by American choreographer Deborah Hay. Moran directs the national Breathing Space dance-in-health programme and curates and teaches widely. Keywords Summer Dancing, dance, art › Artist-led, artist-used: experiences at Coventry's Summer Dancing 2009, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 199-214. Karen Morden Keywords comedy, identity, Britain, pastoral, Vivian Stanshall, carnival Karen Morden is a writer, editor and artist. She completed a D.Phil. thesis in Media and Cultural Studies at the University of Sussex, which focused on Vivian Stanshall and his work. She has written about comedy for The Kettering and The Idler magazines, and has contributed to a number of popular books, including 1001 Paintings You Must See Before You Die, 501 Directors and 101 War Films. › The odd boy: a celebration of Vivian Stanshall, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 209218. Jacquelyn Ford Morie University of Southern California, Institute for Creative Technologies, 12015 Waterfront Drive, Playa Vista, CA 90094-2536, United States of America Keywords Second Life, metaverse, digital culture, virtual worlds, arts, health Dr. Jacquelyn Ford Morie is a scientist, an artist and an expert in harnessing new technologies to support core human aesthetics, needs and desires. From her early photography, printmaking and sculpture, she progressed to creating Virtual Reality (VR) artworks in the 1990s that were highly immersive and emotional experiences. From her science focus, she has developed multi-sensory techniques for VR that can predictably elicit emotional responses from participants within simulated environments, including inventing a scent collar that can be used to deliver odours to a participant in a VR scenario. Most recently she has been adapting her techniques to socially based, 3D virtual worlds. Her other research interests include topics such as space, identity, art and play in technological environments, and she has presented extensively on these topics at conferences worldwide. She received her Ph.D. from the University of East London’s SMARTlab in 2008. › Performing in (virtual) spaces: Embodiment and being in virtual environments, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 123-138. Elise Morrison Harvard University, Derek Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, Science Center 313, One Oxford Street, Cambridge, MA 02138-2901 Keywords theatricality, affect, public space, remediation, defamiliarization, surveillance Elise Morrison recently received her Ph.D. from Brown University in theatre and performance studies. Her dissertation ‘Discipline and Desire: Surveillance, Feminism, Performance’ looks at artists who strategically employ technologies of surveillance to create performances and installations that pose new and different ways of interacting with and understanding apparatuses of surveillance. She teaches courses on this topic as a lecturer on Dramatic Arts at Harvard University, where she also works as the Associate Director for Speaking Instruction. Morrison is currently a resident artist at Perishable Theatre in Providence, RI, where she teaches acting and develops new mixed media cabaret and theatre work. › Performing citizen arrest: Surveillance art and the passerby, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 239-257. Daniel Mroz University of Ottawa, Department of Theatre, 135 Séraphin-Marion, Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 6N5, Canada › Technique in exile: The changing perception of taijiquan, from Ming dynasty military exercise to twentieth-century actor training protocol, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 127-145. Keywords contemporary arts, devised theatre, Battery Opera, One Reed Theatre Ensemble, Chinese martial arts, Taijiquan, martial arts › From movement to action: martial arts in the practice of devised physical theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 161-172. Madhuja Mukherjee Jadavpur University, LB Block, Salt Lake, Kolkata, West Bengal, India Madhuja Mukherjee is currently Assistant Professor at the Department of Film Studies at Jadavpur University and has contributed to the Studies in Musical Theatre journal. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 227-235. Keywords Film Studies, musical theatre Meg Mumford The University of New South Wales, UNSW, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia Meg Mumford is a lecturer in Theatre and Performance Studies at The University of New South Wales. Her research focuses on: the politics of performing bodies; theatre and social reality; translation, intercultural exchange, German theatre and Tanztheater, and theories of acting, gender and performance. She has published widely on Bertolt Keywords social reality, intercultural exchange, German theatre, Pina Bausch Brecht and has completed a volume on Brecht for the Routledge Performance Practitioners series (2008). She has also co-authored work with Alison Phipps both on the translation and intercultural issues raised by their staging of Marieluise Fleißer's Purgatory in Ingolstadt, and on contemporary German theatre. More recently she has written about the national and gender politics of the early work of Pina Bausch. › Translating the strange, performing the peculiar: Marieluise Fleißer's Fegefeuer/Purgatory in Ingolstadt, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.2, 69-81. Katja Münker Dancer, Choreographer, Feldenkrais Practitioner, Berlin Keywords physiotherapy, human intelligence, yoga, improvisation Katja Münker is a freelance dancer/choreographer, Feldenkrais practitioner and physiotherapist based in Berlin. She has been teaching movement, dance and improvisation in national and international contexts since 1990. In her teaching, she focuses on ease and individual interpretation of movement and on conscious learning by the use and stimulation of human intelligence in and through movement. In her creative work, she is interested in long-term processes with various outcomes like performances, installations, walks, lectures and writings. Her recent interest is walking as research and performance practice. She was trained in the Feldenkrais Methode by Mark Reese and in Movement Studies with Amos Hetz. In her dance and improvisation, she trained originally with Keriac, but was also influenced by Keith Hennessy, Kathleen Hermesdorf, K. J. Holmes, Stephanie Maher, Lisa Nelson and colleagues. She has longterm experience in yoga, BMC, Tai Ji Chuan and Qi Gong. › A continuous experiment and a continuous finding: A reflection on choreography, somatic practice and the aesthetics of change and conditions, Written from practice, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 163-176. Teresa Murjas University of Reading, Film, Theatre & Television, Woodlands Avenue, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 1HY, United Kingdom Keywords Polish theatre, Polish film, fin-de-siecle European theatre, practice-as-research, translation, Holocaust representation Teresa Murjas is a lecturer in Theatre at the University of Reading. She specialises in late nineteenth/early twentieth century European theatre and translation. She supervises student directors in her department as well as directing her own practice as research projects. She studied at the universities of Manchester and London and completed her Ph.D. at the University of Birmingham. She has also worked as a lecturer in Theatre and a director at the University of Lodz in central Poland. Teresa's productions have all been staged as public performances, many on the London fringe, including her translation of Slawomir Mrozek's The Turkey and Strindberg's Miss Julie, both of which have inspired several journal articles. She has also directed two of Zapolska's plays in her own translation. › A Question of Identity: translating and directing Slawomir Mrozek's The Turkey, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.3, 162-175. › Bring me the head of a greenfinch: Miss Julie in Britain, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.1, 37-54. › Bloomers ignite: Zolaesque zealotry in British productions of Miss Julie, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.2, 113-128. Szabolcs Musca Keywords European theatre, translation processes, theatrical systems Szabolcs Musca is a Ph.D. student at Bristol University. His research interests include translation and adaptation for performance, dramaturgy and European theatre with a special emphasis on Central and Eastern Europe. In his current research project he is looking at translation processes and its effects on theatre productions of foreign plays arguing that translation practices and histories are constantly shaping dramaturgical solutions and interventions. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 329-338. David E. Myers Georgia State University, School of Music, P.O. Box 4097, Atlanta, 30302-4097, United States of America Keywords American music, education, lifelong learning, music David Myers is Professor of Music, Associate Director of the School of Music, and Founding Director of the Center for Educational Partnerships in Music at Georgia State University, USA. His primary interests are teacher education, lifespan music learning and collaborative music education programmes. He has been a music and opera panelist for the National Endowment for the Arts and a consultant on arts education partnerships for organizations such as the American National Guild of Community Schools of the Arts, Opera America, the Atlanta Symphony and the New York Philharmonic. › Freeing music education from schooling:toward a lifespan perspective on music learning and teaching, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 49-62. Sreedevi K. Nair NSS College for Women, Neeramankara, Thiruvananthapuram, Sreedevi K. Nair teaches English at NSS College for Women in India. Her doctoral research was on literary translations from Malayalam into English. At present, she is doing post-doctoral research on ‘Towards an Indian Theory of Translation – A Study Based on Various Ramayanas Kerala, Pin-695-040, India in Malayalam’. She is the recipient of a Senior Fellowship of the Indian Council of Social Sciences Research, a Post-doctoral Fellowship of the Indian Council of Historical Research, an Academic Associateship of the Indian Institute of Advanced Studies in Shimla and a Junior Fellowship for Literature from the Ministry of Human Resource Development, India. She was International Guest in Residence at the Wakeforest University, North Carolina in 1998 and Visiting Scholar at the University of British Columbia in 2005. She has translated extensively from and into English. In 2004, she received the Kerala State Lalit Kala Academy Award for the Best Translator. Keywords Tholpava Koothu, Pulavar, Koothu Madom, Ramayana, notional audience › When goddess turns spectator: on multiple audiences in Tholpava Koothu performance in Kerala, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 173-186. Kate Napier Head of Curriculum, GSA Conservatoire, Millmead Terrace, Guildford, Surrey, GU2 4YT, United Kingdom Keywords acting, musical theatre, integration, training, singing, publishing Kate Napier was, concurrently and successively, Head of Theatre Studies, Head of Curriculum, and Head of Postgraduate Studies at GSA – the Guildford School ofActing – one of the UK’s principal musical theatre training establishments. She has recently left GSA to pursue personal research and practice interests, and is a memberof the Conference of Drama Schools Research Forum. She holds a Ph.D. from the University of London. › Integration and performance:the usefulness of books in musical theatre training, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 283-293. Devora Neumark Keywords community, performance, dialogue, displacement Interdisciplinary artist Devora Neumark is a faculty member in the MFA-Interdisciplinary Art programme at Goddard College (Vermont) and co-director of Engrenage Noir/LEVIER, a Montreal-based nonprofit community & activist arts advocacy and funding organization. Its most recent initiatives are intended to stimulate dialogue about healthy interdependence and ethical responsiveness while encouraging artistic creation addressing the systemic causes of poverty. Neumark is also currently a Humanities Ph.D. Candidate at Concordia University’s Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Society and Culture. Her research project ‘Radical Beauty for Troubled Times: The (un)making of Home’ examines the role that beauty plays in the process of homemaking in the aftermath of forced displacement. › Close proximity, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 69-83. Christopher Newell University of Hull, School of Arts and New Media, University of Hull, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ Keywords computer speech, speech synthesis, synthetic actors, voice acting, liveness, speech interfaces Christopher Newell is an opera director and computer scientist. As an opera director he has directed for a number of the major UK opera companies. He is Academic Director of iHull; Institute for Creativity and Innovation at the University of Hull and an Honorary Research Fellow in the HCI group in the computer science department at the University of York. He currently holds a Wingate Scholarship to develop a radio melodrama for computer voices. With Alistair Edwards at York he is leading an EPSRC-funded network in Creative Speech Technology (CreST). › Place, authenticity time: a framework for synthetic voice acting, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.2&3, 155180. › ‘Liveness’ in human-machine interaction, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 221-237. JETON NEZIRAJ Keywords Jeton Neziraj is a playwright and the Artistic Director of the National Theatre of Kosovo. His plays have been published and translated into several languages, and there have been productions in the US and in various European countries. Liza po fle/Liza is Sleeping was awarded first prize in a national drama competition. Neziraj has contributed essays on theatre to journals and newspapers at home and abroad, and his books include one on the Kosovar actor Faruk Begolli. He is the founder and leader of the theatre company Multimedia Center, whose special interest is in contemporary theatre. › Theatre in Kosovo: The challenges in the new state, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 339-348. Mary Noonan University College Cork, O'Rahilly Building, Department of French, Cork, Ireland Keywords playwriting, soundscape, orality, textuality, body Mary Noonan is lecturer in French at University College Cork, where she teaches modern and contemporary French theatre and theories of performance. She has published widely in the field of contemporary French theatre, including articles and chapters on the drama of Marguerite Duras, Nathalie Sarraute and Hélène Cixous, the history of French women playwrights of the twentieth century, the voice in contemporary French theatre and the emerging ‘theatre of the text’ in contemporary France. In 2005, she organized an international conference entitled The Contemporary French Theatre: Writing, Performing, Teaching. Recent publications include articles on the theatre of French playwright Noëlle Renaude in Yale French Studies (No.112, 2007) and in Studies in Theatre and Performance (2010). Articles on the cinema of Marguerite Duras and on the work of Valérie Rouzeau are forthcoming. › An archaeology of soundscapes: The theatre of Noëlle Renaude, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 115-126. Sally Jane Norman University of Sussex, Attenborough Centre for Creative Arts, Silverstone Sb 310, Sussex House, Brighton, BN1 9RH, United Kingdom Keywords arts, culture, technology, practice, cosmic adventure Sally Jane Norman is a theorist and practitioner working in performing arts and technology. Her writings include texts published by the Performing Arts Laboratory of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique and commissioned studies for UNESCO and the French Ministry of Culture. She has served on many international juries and commissions, and after launching a pioneering practice-based Digital Arts Ph.D. as Director of the Ecole supérieure de l’image (AngoulêmePoitiers), joined Newcastle University in 2004 to direct Culture Lab, a new interdisciplinary practice-driven research facility. › Instant conductors, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 109-122. Sarah O'Brien Teesside University, School of Arts & Media, Middlesbrough, Tees Valley, TS1 3BA, United Kingdom Sarah O’Brien is a teaching fellow at Lancaster University and has recently completed her Ph.D. (P-a-R) with the Theatre Studies section, Lancaster Institute for Contemporary Arts. Her main research interests are in multi-media performance, video art and installation, live art, performance installation, site-specific and devised performance. Keywords written thesis, reflective judgement, Kant, Eco, schema/schemata › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 123-133. › Practice-as-research in performance: A response to reflective judgement, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 73-84. Jennifer Oates The City University of New York, Queens College and the Graduate Center, 365 5th Avenue, New York, NY, United States of America Keywords Loewe, Brigadoon, Jennifer Oates is Associate Professor at Queens College and the Graduate Center, CUNY, and is Head of the Music Library at Queens College. Her research focuses on nineteenth and twentieth century British music and women and music. She is writing The Musical Life of Hamish MacCunn (1868–1916), a biography of the Scottish composer, for Ashgate and has a critical edition of MacCunn’s concert overtures forthcoming in Recent Researches in the Music of the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. She received the 2004 Ralph Vaughan American music, Scotland, theatre, music Williams Fellowship and the Music Library Association’s 2003 Walter Gerboth for research. › Brigadoon: Lerner and Loewe's Scotland, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 91-99. Elizabeth Oehrle University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa, Music School, Durban, 4041, South Africa Keywords culture, race, African music, music, education Elizabeth Oehrle is Senior Research Fellow at University of KwaZulu – Natal (UKZN). She championed the promotion of intercultural education through music in Southern Africa by organizing the first multiracial conference for all music educators at tertiary institutions in South Africa. In 1991 she started a network for the promotion of intercultural education through music (NETIEM) and initiated The Talking Drum. She founded ‘One of the first and most enduring performing arts outreach programmemes in the country’ (UKZN Development Brief-2006) called UKUSA, an NPO Community Performing Arts Organization now in its 23rd year, and she remains the facilitator. Her concern for the establishment of an African Music Post led her to raise funds for the first such post established at UKZN in the 1990s. She is also a member of the International Education Board of Music Education Research Journal. › Values infusing UKUSA: A developmental community arts programme in South Africa, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 379-386. Carol J. Oja Harvard Department of Music, Music Building, Cambridge, MA 02138, United States of America Keywords propaganda, youth culture, juvenile offenders Carol J. Oja is William Powell Mason Professor of Music at Harvard and on the faculty of its program in the History of American Civilization. She is at work on a book about Leonard Bernstein’s early Broadway shows. Her previous publications include Making Music Modern: New York in the 1920s, which won the Lowens Book Award from the Society for American Music and an ASCAP-Deems Taylor Award; and Copland and his World (co-edited with Judith Tick). She is past-president of the Society for American Music. › West Side Story and The Music Man: whiteness, immigration, and race in the US during the late 1950s, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 13-30. Chukwuma Okoye Department of Theatre Arts, University of Ibadan, Oyo State Keywords African theatre, postcolonialism, cultural identity, self-writing Chukwuma Okoye is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of Theatre Arts, University of Ibadan, Nigeria, where he teaches contemporary African theatre and performance. His current research interest is in critically marginalized forms of contemporary African theatre, especially by young people, that are neither taught nor investigated in conventional theatre scholarship. He has published critical essays on indigenous Igbo masquerade theatre in Nigeria, and on the location of African theatre in current debates in literary and cultural studies. › Deference and defiance: African theatre and Femi Osofisan's signifying difference, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 305-314. Mary Oliver University of Salford, School of Media, Music and Performance, Adelphi Building, Peru Street, Salford, Greater Manchester, M3 6EN, United Kingdom Keywords digital arts, interface, comedy, theatre, body Mary Oliver is Reader in Digital Performance and Associate Head of Research in the School of Media, Music and Performance, Salford University. She has been a professional performer, writer and video maker for over twenty years, performing internationally across the fields of contemporary music, theatre, and dance. She is currently building a new full scale digital performance work Somewhere Between Heaven and Earth and undertaking an AHRC research project into the effects on performancemethodology of performing with cartoons. In 2007, she was the convenor of the international symposium New Performance Paradigms which explored some of the future possible directions of performance practice. › The emancipating possibilities of performing with cartoons, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 59-67. › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 117-122. Rowan Oliver University of Hull, School of Arts and New Media, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Keywords groove, Goldfrapp, African American music Rowan Oliver is Subject Group Leader for the Music degrees at the University of Hull’s School of Arts and New Media. His research interests include African American popular music and the nature of groove. As a professional musician he has worked internationally with a number of artists, including six years as the drummer with ‘Goldfrapp’, and he continues to record and perform. In 2007, his score for Mouth to Mouth won Best Film Music at the Annonay International First Film Festival and he is currently composing for several feature films in production. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 167-185. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 187-195. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 67-86. › BOOK REVIEW, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 201206. Hod Orkibi University of Haifa, Graduate School of Creative Arts Therapies, 11/14 Hana Rovina St., Tel-Aviv, 69372, Israel Keywords professional identity, psychodrama and dramatherapy, arts therapy, youth, gender, drama Hod Orkibi, Ph.D., is a creative arts therapist specializing in intermodal psychodrama, faculty member, and Head of the Field Training Division at the Graduate School of Creative Art Therapies at Haifa University, Israel. His practice involves inter-modal psychodrama, teaching, and administration. Hod is a registered member of the International Expressive Arts Therapy Association (IEATA); the Israeli Association of Psychodrama (I.A.P.); and the Israeli Association of Creative and Expressive Therapists (I.C.E.T.). He holds a BSc in Psychology, a BEd in Theatre Education and Directing, an MA in Expressive Arts Therapy, and an MA in Theatre Arts. His research interests include professional identity development, supervision and filed training; psychodrama and drama therapy; teach-treat boundaries in experiential learning; aesthetics topics in the creative art therapies; and drama-based assessment. › The experience of acting: A synthesis of concepts and a clinical vignette, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 193-203. Deirdre Osborne Goldsmiths, University of London, Lewisham Way, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Keywords race, theatre, musicals, the 1990s Deirdre Osborne is a senior lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London. She has published widely on Black British literature and performance - the result of having interviewed the writers and lobbied for inclusion of their work as a matter of course in all curricula she teaches, including poets, novelists and dramatists such as: Lemn Sissay, Debbie Tucker Green, Andrea Levy, Kwame Kwei-Armah, Roy Williams, SuAndi, Mojisola Adebayo, Valerie Mason-John and Courttia Newland. Her edited anthology Hidden Gems (Oberon Books, 2008) showcases previously unpublished plays by Sissay, Adebayo, Mason-John, Newland and Lennie James and Paul Anthony Morrison together with critical essays by academics with a longstanding interest in championing Black British culture. › Writing black back: an overview of black theatre and performance in Britain, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.1, 13-32. Helen Ostovich McMaster University, English and Cultural Studies, Chester New Hall 321, 1280 Main Street West, Hamilton, Ontario, L8S 4L9, Canada Keywords Shakespeare, hypermasculinity, anti-war, Peter Cockett, multimedia performance Helen Ostovich is Professor of English at McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada, and editor of the journal Early Theatre. She is series editor of Studies in Performance and Early Modern Drama (Ashgate Publishing), and one of the general editors of The Revels Plays. She is also general editor of Queen’s Men Editions, part of the Internet Shakespeare Editions website. She has edited several of Jonson’s plays, most recently The Magnetic Lady for the Cambridge Works of Ben Jonson; and is finalizing Heywood and Brome’s The Late Lancashire Witches (1634) and co-editing The Jovial Crew (1641) for the Richard Brome Electronic Edition (HRI Sheffield, June 2009, with paper version later from Oxford University Press). › Unsettling Henry V: a Canadian perspective, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 289-305. Hsin-yun Ou National University of Kaohsiung, Western Languages and Literature, 10F-A2, No, 102, B0-AI 2nd Road, Kaohsiung, 813, Taiwan Keywords Chinoiserie, Garrick, neoclassicism, Francophobia, William Chambers, American and British theatre Hsin-yun Ou is Assistant Professor at the National University of Kaohsiung, Taiwan. Hsin-yun Ou holds a Ph.D. in eighteenth century literature, drama and theatre from the Department of Drama and Theatre, Royal Holloway College, University of London and a MPhil. in Shakespeare and Drama to 1640 from the English Faculty, Oxford University. › David Garrick's reaction against French Chinoiserie in The Orphan of China, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 25-42. Katie Overy University of Edinburgh, The Institute for Music in Human and Social Development (IMHSD), Alison House, 12 Nicolson Square, Edinburgh, EH8 9DF, United Kingdom Katie Overy is senior lecturer in Music and co-director of the Institute for Music in Human and Social Development at the University of Edinburgh. Her primary interest is the role of music in human learning. She completed her postgraduate studies in Music Psychology at the University of Sheffield, postgraduate studies in Music Pedagogy at the Zoltán Kodály Pedagogical Institute of Music, Hungary, and postdoctoral research in music neuroscience at Harvard Medical School, USA. Keywords music, Scotland, prison, education, self-esteem › Engaging Scottish young offenders in education through music and art, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 47-64. Lucy O’Brien Goldsmiths College University of London, 18 Ambleside Road, London, NW10 3UJ, United Kingdom Keywords She Bop, women in rock, Madonna, Annie Lennox, new feminism Lucy O’Brien is a writer/broadcaster and author of She Bop: The Definitive History of Women in Rock, Pop & Soul (1995), She Bop II (2002) and the biographies Madonna: Like An Icon (2007), (1999) and Annie Lennox (1993). Her work has appeared in anthologies including Rock n’ Roll Is Here to Stay (2000) and Punk Rock, So What? (1999). She co-produced Righteous Babes, the 1998 Channel 4 film on rock and new feminism. She teaches Media & Communications at Goldsmiths College, University of London, and Popular Music Studies at Westminster and Solent Universities. › Can I Have A Taste of Your Ice Cream?, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 27-40. John T. O’Donnell The University of Glasgow, Computing Science Department, Glasgow, G12 8QQ, United Kingdom Keywords computer systems, algorithms, computer architecture, practical programming John O'Donnell is currently a lecturer in the Computing Science Department at the University of Glasgow, specialising in computer systems (software and hardware), functional programming, and formal methods. His research is concerned with computer systems, algorithms, and how to develop reliable applications and reason about their behavior. He is actively involved in functional programming research, and am a member of the IFIP Working Group 2.8 on, Functional Programming, and the ENDS (computer systems) group at Glasgow. › Calibrating a bowing checkerfor violin students, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 125-139. Jim O’Loughlin University of Northern Iowa, 1227 West 27th Street, Cedar Falls, IA 50614, United States of America Keywords Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Tom plays, adaptation Jim O'Loughlin teaches American literature and creative writing at the University of Northern Iowa, USA. He is the co-author (with Julie Husband) of Daily Life in the Industrial United States, 1870-1900 (Greenwood Press) and the publisher of Final Thursday Press. Hailing originally from Connecticut, he received his Ph.D. at the State University of New York (Buffalo). At UNI, he offers courses in American literature, fiction writing, and professional writing. › Uncle Tom’s Cabin as Dominant Culture, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 45-56. Rachel O’Riordan Rachel O’Riordan is a lecturer in Drama at Queens University, Belfast. She is artistic director of the Belfast-based theatre company, Random Queen's University, Drama Department, 11 University Square, Northern Ireland, BT7 1NN, United Kingdom Productions. The company’s production of Hurricane opened at the Soho Theatre (London) in 2003 and is scheduled for a West End transfer prior to its off-Broadway engagement. Keywords body, Elizabeth I, Virgin Mary, performance, religion, history › Religion, language and performance in Hamlet, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.2, 77-94. Peter O’Rourke Keywords performance, spectatorship, comedic functions Peter O’Rourke has a Ph.D. from the University of Leeds, where he investigated the interrelations between performance and spectatorship at the Venice Carnevale. He is teaching at the Universities of Leeds and Hull. He was the first recipient of the Friel Scholarship at Queen’s University Belfast to undertake his Masters in Irish Theatre and Culture, during which he carried out the main part of his research on Kilroy. › ‘It’s like a theatrical railwaystation round here’:The comedic functions ofmetatheatre in ThomasKilroy’s Tea and Sex andShakespeare and Talbot’s Box, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 73-82. Emer O’Toole Royal Holloway University of London, Department of Drama and Theatre, Sutherland House, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, United Kingdom Keywords postcolonial theory, intercultural theatre, ethnocentricity, cultural piracy Emer O' Toole is currently a researcher at Royal Holloway University of London, where her research is situated in the rich academic discourse surrounding intercultural theatre practice. She believes that the intercultural debate has at its core a concern with rights of representation and studies this through analyses of contemporary intercultural case studies – including Tim Supple’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, Bisi Adigun and Roddy Doyle’s The Playboy of the Western World and Peter Brook’s 11&12. › REVIEWS, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 229-244. Nicholas Pagan Eastern Mediterranean University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, via Mersin 10, Gazimagusa, T.R.N.C., Cyprus Nicholas O. Pagan, who received his Ph.D. in English from the University of Florida, is currently a Professor of English Literature and Humanities at Eastern Mediterranean University in Northern Cyprus where he teaches courses in literature, literary theory, modern drama, and semiotics. Most of his publications have been in American literature and literary theory and criticism as well as theatre studies and Keywords modern drama, semiotics, dispossession film. Edited collections include Literary Studies: Beginnings and Ends (2001) and Ethics and Subjectivity in Literary and Cultural Studies (2002). Recent articles include 'Inside Fateh Azzam’s Baggage: Monologue and Forced Migration' (Theatre Research International, 2006) and 'Arthur Miller and the Rhetoric of Ethnic Self-Expression' (Journal of American Studies 2008). › Theatre and the experience of dispossession, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 275-288. › Theatre and the experience of dispossession, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 171-184. › Theatre and the experience of dispossession, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 59-72. Derek Paget The University of Reading, Department of Film, Theatre and Television, Whiteknights, PO Box 217, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6UR, United Kingdom Derek Paget is Honorary Research Fellow in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading. He led the AHRC ‘Acting with Facts’ research project (2007–10). Once a theatre worker (notably for Theatre Workshop), he is the author of True Stories (1990) and No Other Way to Tell It (1998 – 2nd edition 2011). A member of Studies in Theatre and Performance's Editorial Board, he is also an associate editor of Studies in Documentary Film. Keywords documentary, acting, theatre, television, porosity › The new edition of Oh What A Lovely War – an intemperate Oedipal rant thereon, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.1, 47-51. › ‘The war game is continuous’: productions and receptions of Theatre Workshop’s Oh What A Lovely War, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.2, 71-86. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.2, 133-135. Meade Palidofsky Storycatchers Theatre, Artistic Director, 920 N. Franklin, Ste. 302, Chicago, Illinois, Cook, 60640, United States of America Keywords theatre, singing, creativity, empowerment, healing Meade Palidofsky is the founder and Artistic Director of Storycatchers Theatre, a not-for-profit performing arts organization. The Chicago Community Trust named Ms. Palidofsky as one of three 2010 Experienced Leader Fellows. As part of the fellowship, she studied trauma theory with Dr. Bradley Stolbach, Director of the La Rabida Children's Trauma Center. In 2009, Ms. Palidofsky was one of three artists selected to be part of a Columbia College Chicago/Scotland Arts Council artists’ exchange. Ms. Palidofsky’s work with the Fabulous Females at the Illinois Youth Center in Warrenville is featured in the documentary Girls on the Wall, awarded a midwest Emmy in November, 2010. The documentary was presented nationally on PBS and was awarded top documentary film at the Bermuda International Film Festival. › If I Cry for You. … Turning unspoken trauma into song and musical theatre, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 121-128. Scott Palmer University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries, University of Leeds, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords creativity, dance, performance, robotics design, interactive media, installation Scott Palmer is a lecturer in Scenography in the School of Performance & Cultural Industries at the University of Leeds. His research interests focus on lighting design and the interaction between technology and performance. Recent projects include the AHRC-funded Projecting Performance: investigating the relationship between performer, operator and digital ‘sprite’, undertaken in collaboration with Sita Popat and KMA Creative Technology Ltd. An early aspect of this research appears in 'A Place to Play' in Intellect's The Potentials of Spaces and is also documented in detail in ‘Creating Common Ground: Dialogues Between Performance and Digital Technologies’ (with Sita Popat) in Intellect's International Journal of Performance Arts & Digital Media vol 1. › Creating common ground: dialogues between performance and digital technologies, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 47-66. › Dancing in the Streets: The sensuous manifold as a concept for designing experience, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 297-314. Roger Palmer La Trobe University, 5 Bolden Street, Heidelberg, Victoria, 3084, Australia Keywords music, choir, New Zealand, recorder, aesthetics, music, classical music, practice, embodiment, audience Roger Palmer is a leader of recorder and early music enthusiasts in New Zealand and has arranged and composed music for recorder consorts and renaissance instruments. He completed his Master of Music as a mature student. Roger describes himself as an amateur musician – despite the ambiguity and status implications of the term – and maintains a strong interest in social sciences, the arts in general and the philosophy of music in particular. › Questions arising from the views of some members of four amateur classical music organizations, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 203216. Claire Pamment Beaconhouse National University, Department of Theatre, Film and Television, 3-C Zafar Ali Road, Gulberg V, Lahore, Pakistan Keywords South Asian performance, comedy studies, Asian popular culture Claire Pamment, MPhil., is Foreign Faculty (Higher Education Commission) in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television at Beaconhouse National University, Lahore. Her research interests include popular South Asian performance cultures. Her articles have been published in the Asian Theatre Journal, the Journal of South Asian Popular Culture, TDR (The Drama Review), (South Asian Graduate Research Journal), and Sohbet. In 2008 she received the International Federation of Theatre Research’s award for Best New Scholar (second place), and she is a member of the Advisory Board of Comedy Studies. › Ray and Michael Cooney’sTom, Dick and Harry inPakistan: The politics ofmistaken identities, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 47-54. Vanio Papadelli Ph.D. candidate, Goldsmiths, University of London Keywords movement teaching, dance theatre, Ray Chung Vanio Papadelli is a performer, performance-maker and movement teacher in Primary and Higher Education (visiting lecturer, Goldsmiths, University of London, 2008–10). She has trained in acting (Drama School of Athens Odeion) and dance (Dance Diploma, Birkbeck College, London) and has gained her MA Performance Making (Goldsmiths, University of London). Vanio is currently undertaking a Ph.D. PAR at Goldsmiths into Post-Grotowskian practices reconsidered through CI. She has performed in her own dance theatre work (Hackney Empire, Shunt Vaults, Creative Forum for Independent Artists, Alexandria, Egypt) as well as in other companies’ projects in London (Etcetera Theatre, Athletes of the Heart: Rosemary BranchSuspense Festival) and Poland (The Crucible by Song of the Goat). › A conversation with Ray Chung, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 155-161. Clare Parfitt-Brown University of Chichester, Dance Department, Bishop Otter Campus, College Lane, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 6PE, United Kingdom Keywords cinema, Loïe Fuller, cancan, interactivity, dance, embodiment Clare Parfitt-Brown is a senior lecturer in dance at the University of Chichester. She completed her Ph.D. entitled ‘Capturing the Cancan: Body Politics from the Enlightenment to Postmodernity’ in 2008. Her research focuses on the vehicles that carry popular dance practices through history and across geographical space, such as memory and the visual technologies of photography, film and digital media. She has presented her research at conferences in the United Kingdom, United States, France and South Korea. › ‘Like a butterfly under glass’: the cancan, Loïe Fuller and cinema, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 107- 120. Clare Park Keywords power, dyskinesia, theatre, movement, photography Clare Park MA (RCA) is a creative and fine art photographer who specializes in portraiture. She explores photographic self image through the use of symbol and metaphor, having begun developing this work as a response to personal narratives of her own life journey and her reflections upon being a dancer. Her strong personal style is evident in posters for theatre and dance companies such as the RNT, RSC and the ROH Covent Garden. The body, movement and collaboration are keys to Clare's work whether it be for a commissioned portrait or for a personal project. › Dance with time: Movement, when all is said and done, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 205-213. Jennifer Parker-Starbuck Dr. Jennifer Parker-Starbuck is a senior lecturer in Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies at Roehampton University, London. Her book, Cyborg Theatre: Corporeal/Technological Intersections in Multimedia, investigates multimedia performance and contemporary subjectivity (Palgrave 2011). She is an associate editor of the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, published by Intellect, as well as an Assistant Editor for PAJ: A Journal of Art and Performance. Her current research areas are multimedia performance, animality in performance, and contemporary performance practices. Roehampton University, Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, Roehampton Lane, London, SW15 5PH, United Kingdom Keywords multimedia, performance, the Wooster Group, robotics, theatre › The play-within-the-film-within-the-play's the thing: re-transmitting analogue bodies in the Wooster Group's Hamlet, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 23-34. Rod Paton University of Chichester, Department of Music, Chichester, West Sussex, PO19 6PE, United Kingdom Rod Paton is is a jazz horn player, composer and community musician with long experience of running workshops in the UK and beyond. He is senior lecturer in music at the University of Chichester where he teaches improvisation, composition, music therapy and community music. Keywords community music, music therapy, composition, improvisation › Lifemusic: Sounding out university community engagement, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 105-120. Alan Peacock University of Hertfordshire, Mobile & Locative Media Group, School of Film, Music and Media, College Lane, Hatfield, Hertfordshire, AL10 9AB, United Kingdom Alan Peacock is a practitioner, theoretician and teacher, based in the School of Film, Music and Media at the University of Hertfordshire. His work is concerned with interactivity, narrative and aesthetics, with a particular concern for sound and the voice. He is a member of the Mobile and Locative Media Enquiry Group at the University of Hertfordshire, School of Film, Music and Media. Keywords interactivity, performance, cybernetics, semiotics, mobile media › Being here: performative aspects of locative media, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.2, 127-146. Louise Peacock University of Hull, Department of Drama and Music, University of Hull, Department of Drama and Music, University of Hull, Senior Lecturer in Drama, Director of Undergraduate Studies Louise Peacock is a Senior Lecturer in Drama at the University of Hull. Her research interests are in the areas of clowning, commedia dell’arte, slapstick and stand-up comedy. She is the author of Serious Play: Modern Clown Performance (Intellect, 2009) and is currently writing a book entitled Slapstick and Comic Performance for Palgrave Macmillan. › Joan Rivers – Reading the meaning, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 125-137. Keywords clowning, slapstick, standup comedy › Analysing stand-up comedy, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 99-100. Mike Pearson University of Wales Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and Television, 67 Glamorgan Street, Cardiff, CF5 1QT, United Kingdom Keywords performance, performance studies, pedagogy, Wales Mike Pearson is Professor of Performance Studies in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television, University of Wales Aberystwyth. He makes performance with Pearson/Brookes. He is currently completing work on a monograph Site-specific Performance (Palgrave), and a substantial contribution to a volume on the history of the Mickery Theatre, Amsterdam. His research involves performance and landscape; performance and archaeology; biography, personal narrative and memory in performance; folklore and traditional performance practices; the archaeology of Antarctic exploration; and devising performance. › Way out west!, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 253-262. Ellen Marie Peck Keywords theatre history, dramatic theory, musical theatre history Ellen Marie Peck earned her MA and Ph.D. in theatre from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and her BA in theatre from Oakland University in Rochester, Michigan. She recently published an article for Contemporary Theatre Review entitled ‘“Ah, Sweet Mystery”: Rediscovering Three Female Lyricists of the Early Twentieth-Century American Musical Theater’. She is a contributor to the second edition of the Grove Dictionary of American Music and has an essay forthcoming in Essays on the Influence of the Female Artist in the Early 20th Century, edited by Paul Fryer. Ellen is Assistant Professor of Drama at Jacksonville State University in Alabama, where she teaches Theatre History, Dramatic Theory and Musical Theatre History. › Artistic freedom through subsidy: The British model of reviving American musicals, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 85-97. Russell Pensyl Northeastern University, Department of Art + Design, 239 Ryder Hall, Boston, MA, 2115, United States of America Keywords augmented reality, virtual reality, theatre masks, virtual masks, Gopal Baratham Russell Pensyl is currently an Associate Professor and Director of the Interaction and Entertainment Research Centre at NTU. He received his MFA from Western Michigan University in 1988. Pensyl has more than 23 years of experience in designing and creating interactive digital media content for corporations such as IBM, Apple, Motorola, Disney, and many others. Pensyl’s work has been exhibited internationally with installations in SIGGRAPH 2002, the 2004 Shanghai Biennial and the 2006 Second Art and Science Exhibition in Beijing. › Digitally augmented reality characters in live theatre performances, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 35-49. Xenia Pestova Keywords interactive arts, live arts, piano Xenia Pestova is a pianist and researcher with a special interest in contemporary repertoire and interdisciplinary approaches. She holds a Doctor of Music degree in piano performance from the McGill University Schulich School of Music. Following childhood music education in piano and composition in Russia, Xenia moved to New Zealand with her family. She continued her studies in the United Kingdom, the Netherlands, France and Canada. Among her teachers are Håkon Austbø, Louise Bessette, Judith Clark, Sara Laimon, Philip Mead, Ian Pace and Yvonne Loriod-Messiaen in piano, and Ross Harris and John Young in instrumental and electroacoustic composition. Xenia's awards include an unanimous First Prize at the 2004 Xavier Montsalvatge International Piano Competition in Girona, Spain, a Special Mention at the 2003 Messiaen International Piano Competition in Paris, and Second Prize at the 2000 KeriKeri National Piano Competition, New Zealand's oldest and most prestigious piano competition. › Models of interaction: performance strategies in works for piano and live electronics, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 113-126. Lloyd Peters University of Salford, University of Salford, Adelphi House, Adelphi Street, Salford, M3 6EN, United Kingdom Keywords television comedy, racism, Little Britain, Matt Lucas, David Walliams Lloyd Peters has lectured at the University of Salford since 1992. In that time he became a senior lecturer, Head of Performance and an internationally published researcher in Political Performance. He is currently Programme Leader of Fiction Film Production (MA). Peters has been a professional actor, director and writer for 33 years and has received many broadcast commissions. He has worked with a number of the United Kingdom’s leading practitioners, including film director Mike Leigh, Ken Russell, Alan Bleasedale and Michael Wearing. He founded the ‘alternative comedy’ company 20th Century Coyote (with Rik Mayall) whilst studying Drama at Manchester University (1975– 1978). › Racism in comedy reappraised: Back to Little England?, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 191-200. Helen Phelan University of Limerick, Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, National Technological Park, Limerick, Co. Limerick, Ireland Keywords ritual, practice, performance, Ireland, religion, culture Helen Phelan is Associate Director of the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance, University of Limerick, Ireland. She is programme director of the Arts Practice Ph.D. programme which commenced at the Academy in 2009. From 2000-09 she was Course Director of the MA Ritual Chant and Song programme at the Academy and Assistant Dean of the College of Humanities from 2003–05. She is director of the Sanctuary initiative, funded by the Higher Education Authority, towards the development of cultural initiatives with new migrant communities in Ireland. Her publications are primarily in the area of ritual theory and performance studies. › Practice, ritual and community music: doing as identity, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 143-158. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 5-8. › Religion, music and the site of ritual: Baptismal rites and the Irish citizenship referendum, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 25-38. Alison Phipps The University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow, Lanarkshire, United Kingdom Keywords intercultural studies, anthropology, cultural studies, modern languages Alison Phipps is Professor of Languages and Intercultural Studies and is Associate Dean (Graduate Studies). Her research interests focus on languages and intercultural studies, with a particular critical concern for the different ways in which people learn to live and communicate together, by stepping outside comfortable or familiar contexts. Her work is often interdisciplinary and draws on the resources of social and cultural anthropology, theatre and cultural studies, theology, law, modern languages and education. › Translating the strange, performing the peculiar: Marieluise Fleißer's Fegefeuer/Purgatory in Ingolstadt, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.2, 69-81. Thy Phu University of W. Ontario, English Department, 1393 Western Road, ON N6G 1G9, Canada Thy Phu is Assistant Professor in the English Department at the University of Western Ontario, where she teaches courses on cultural studies and critical theory. Her research focuses on Asian American citizenship and visual culture,with a focus on the representation of race in photography. Keywords copyright, horror, transnational adaptation, representations of Japan › Horrifying adaptations: Ringu, The Ring, and the cultural contexts of copying, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 43-58. Angela Piccini University of Bristol, Department of Drama, Cantocks Close, Woodland Road, Bristol, BS8 1UP, United Kingdom Keywords creativity, practice, AHRB, metatheatre Angela Piccini is a senior lecturer in Screen in the Department of Drama: Theatre, Film, Television at the University of Bristol. She is also departmental Head of Education. Her work investigates place and visual culture and the dialogue between fact and fiction produced by the documentary impulse. Specifically, she continues to be interested in the ways in which the materialized traces of the past circulate through contemporary and historic screen practices. These span ethnographic and archaeological film, factual television, experimental video and social media. › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 315-. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.3, 191-. Mary E. Piercey Memorial University of Newfoundland, Department of Ethnomusicology, Mmap/Arts and culture, St John's, Newfoundland, A1C 5S7, Canada Keywords Arctic, Nunavut, aboriginal, traditional indigenous knowledge, music Mary Piercey, originally from Fortune, Newfoundland, is a Ph.D. candidate in Ethnomusicology at Memorial University of Newfoundland under the supervision of Dr. Beverley Diamond. Mary has lived and taught music at Qitiqliq High School in Arviat, Nunavut for four years. During this time she founded and directed the Arviat Imngitingit Community Choir, a mixed-voice group specializing in traditional and contemporary Inuit music originating from the Kivalliq region of Nunavut. Mary studied choral conducting with Dr. Doreen Rao, Dr. Lori-Anne Dolloff and John Tuttle and holds a MA in Music Education (under the supervision of Dr. David Elliott) from the University of Toronto. › The musical culture of an ‘Inuk’ teenager, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 189-201. Michael Pinchbeck Nottingham Writer's Studio, Sutton Place Business Centre, 49 Stony Street, Nottingham, Nottinghamshire, NG1 1LX, United Kingdom Keywords failure, problem, dramaturgy, writing, Reckless Sleepers Michael Pinchbeck is a writer, live artist, dramaturg and performance maker based in Nottingham. He studied Theatre at Lancaster University, has a MA in Performance and Live Art from Nottingham Trent University and has lectured in performance at the University of Chester. He has written numerous articles on dance and performance for Studies in Theatre and Performance, Dance Theatre Journal and Platform eJournal. He works as a dramaturg with Reckless Sleepers and his research interests focus on the role of the 'outside eye' in contemporary performance. He is currently a Ph.D. student at Loughborough University. › Ten characters in search of a narrative, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 51-58. Stacey Pitsillides Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross, London, SE14 6NW, United Kingdom Stacey is currently a Ph.D. design student at Goldsmiths, University of London where her research focuses on digital death, digital afterlife and digital heritage. She has contributed reviews to the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media. › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 117-122. Keywords design, digital death, digital heritage David Plans University of Hull, School of Arts and New Media, Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough, North Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Keywords computational musicology, genetic co-evolution, digital music David Plans Casal is a musician and researcher. His research focuses on using new techniques in computational musicology as methods for composition. His current focus uses evolutionary computation techniques, in particular genetic co-evolution, as applied to the frequency domain using MPEG7, in order to create reflexive music systems. He usually drives these from a piano, although lately he has built his own chordophonic contraptions. He has given papers and performances at the International Computer Music Conference, the European Conference on Artificial Life, the Darwin Symposium and the Computer Arts Society in London. His teaching focuses on software and hardware practices for digital music and he is a Lecturer in the School of Arts and New Media, at the University of Hull. › REVIEWS, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 91-104. Daniël Ploeger De Montfort University, Faculty of Humanities, Clephan Building, De Montfort University, The Gateway, Leicester, LE1 9BH, United Kingdom Keywords performance, installation, human body, technology, cultural roles of sound Daniël Ploeger is a Dutch performance and installation artist. He is also a lecturer in the Department of Performance and Digital Arts at De Montfort University in Leicester. His performance installations explore interactions between the human body and technological commodities. Originally trained as a musician, his work often engages with the cultural roles of sound. He has previously taught on courses in performance art and performance technology at Brunel University West London, and the University of Sussex, where he is currently completing his doctoral thesis. Daniël’s artwork has been featured in museums and galleries in Europe, the United States and China and his writing has been published in journals such as the Body, Space and Technology Journal and Media–N Journal of the New Media Caucus. › Sonic prosthetics: Exploring posthuman personal space in digital performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.2, 155-169. Jo Pond Birmingham City University, School of Jewellery, Birmingham Institute of Art & Design, Vittoria Street, Birmingham, B1 3PA, United Kingdom Keywords mental health, narrative, jewellery, Wabi-Sabi After working at Loughborough University as a Technical Instructor, Jo Pond returned to education, graduating in 2005 with an MA distinction in Jewellery, Silversmithing & Related Products, from the School of Jewellery, Birmingham. She subsequently won the 2005 BDI Industry & Genius Awards for ‘Products and Genius’. Alongside her practice as a studio jeweller, Jo now works as a lecturer at the School of Jewellery and is a member of Contemporary Applied Arts. › Narrative jewellery: The journey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 309-319. Colin Poole Independent, United Kingdom Keywords audience, collaboration, failure, Choreodrome Colin Poole was born in London and trained at the Laban Centre, Alvin Ailey and the Central School of Ballet. He has worked with many of England’s leading dance companies and choreographers, including Phoenix and Images, Rambert Dance Company and numerous British independent companies and choreographers. His works include Symbiosis (1996), Mothertongue (1997), Bad Faith (2000), Nobodies Perfect (2001), Cool Memories (2001), The box office (2004) and Smoke (2005). Colin was commissioned for the Place Prize 2008. In 2009 he was commissioned to make 4s:Kin – an all male quintet for State of Emergency. › My name is Colin, and this is Simon, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 65-78. Benjamin Poore University of York, Department of Theatre, Film and Television, Heslington, York, YO10 5DD, United Kingdom Keywords Victorian, farce, Sweeney Todd, Dracula, Dickens, Gothic, Shaw Benjamin Poore is a lecturer in Theatre in the Department of Theatre, Film and Television at the University of York. He has published articles on George Bernard Shaw, Sweeney Todd, and representations of villainy in adaptations of Dickens and Wilkie Collins. His first book, Heritage, Nostalgia and Modern British Theatre (Palgrave) is currently in press, and focuses on changing representations of the Victorians since the late 1960s. Ben has reviewed for the Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance and Performing Ethos, and his wider interests include the Victorian Gothic and Victorian Drama, particularly farcical comedy. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 161-170. › I have been true to you, upon my guilty soul I have!: Negotiating Nancy, hyperauthenticity and hyperfidelity in the 2007 BBC adaptation of Oliver Twist, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 157-170. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 213-221. › REVIEWS, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 229-244. Sita Popat Sita Popat is a senior lecturer in Dance and Head of the School of Performance & Cultural Industries at the University of Leeds. Her University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom research interests centre on choreography and new technologies, and her dancing partners include humans, robots and digital sprites. She is the author of Invisible Connections: Dance, Choreography and Internet Communities (Routledge 2006) and Associate Editor of the International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media. Keywords creativity, dance, performance, robotics design, interactive media, collaboration › Creating common ground: dialogues between performance and digital technologies, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 47-66. › ‘Ways of Thinking, Ways of Doing’: Review of the second international conference for digital technologies and performance arts, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 209-. › Emergent objects: Designing through performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 269-280. › Introduction, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 3-4. › The online devising process: creating theatre through Internet collaboration, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.2, 87-106. Stamatia Portanova Birkbeck, University of London, Department of Media and Cultural Studies, Malet Street, Bloomsbury, London, WC1E 7HX, United Kingdom Keywords dance, film, digital media, movement, perception, pop music Stamatia Portanova is a lecturer in Media Studies at the Birkbeck College, University of London. Her research focuses on digital culture and aesthetics, particularly in relation to movement and dance. She is currently working on a monograph on the relationship between choreography, technology and philosophy. The book is under consideration by MIT Press, for publication in the 'Technologies of Lived Abstraction' series edited by Brian Massumi and Erin Manning. Stamatia’s work has also been published in several books, and in journals such as Space and Culture, Angelaki and Fibreculture. She is also a member of the Sense Lab, ‘a laboratory for thought in motion’, and an editor for Inflexions: A Journal for Research-Creation. › Thinking movement and the creation of dance through numbers, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 139-152. Stuart Price De Montfort University, Clephan Building, Bonners Lane, Leicester, LE2 1WE, United Kingdom Dr. Stuart Price is a principal lecturer in Media and Cultural Production at De Montfort University. His published work includes articles on political authority, news discourses, the War on Terror and cultural formations in antiquity. He is the author of Discourse Power Address (2007). Keywords narrative, themes, PostTraumatic Stress Disorder › Displacing the Gods? Agency and Power in Adaptations of Ancient History and Myth, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 117-132. Roy Priest Birmingham City University, Faculty of Technology, Engineering and the Environment, School of Digital Media Technology, Millennium Point, Curzon Street, Birmingham, B4 7XG, United Kingdom Keywords music technology, student placements, employability, assessment, reflective practice, experiential learning Roy Priest is a senior lecturer at Birmingham City University. Roy is Course Director for BSc (Hons) Music Technology and MSc Sound Engineering and Module Coordinator across a mix of modules in the areas of design and graphics, music industry and media production management. Roy is also Final Year Project Coordinator for all Digital Media Technology courses. Roy’s current area of research is exploring the value of placements to undergraduate students. › The value of placements to undergraduate BSc (Hons) Music Technology students, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 47-65. Ross W. Prior University of Northampton, Avenue Campus, St George's Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, United Kingdom Ross Prior is a principal lecturer in Drama and Acting at the University of Northampton. Educated in Australia, he took his first degree at Deakin University, his MA at the University of Melbourne and his Ph.D. at Griffith University. He has recently been involved in a government survey of actor training in England. Keywords tacit knowledge, community music, practice, synnoetics › Understanding actor trainers' articulation of their practice, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 295-306. › Editorial, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 237-239. › EDITORIAL, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 3-5. Anton Pujol UNC Charlotte, Department of Languages and Culture Studies, 9201 University City Boulevard, Charlotte, NC, 28223, United States of America Keywords Gilles Deleuze, Catalan cinema, Lluïsa Cunillé, Barcelona, Spanish Civil War Anton Pujol graduated from the Universitat Autónoma in Barcelona. He earned a Ph.D. at the University of Kansas in Spanish Literature and an MBA from the University of Chicago, with a focus in economics and international finance. Currently he is an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte where he is the Graduate Program Director for Spanish. He has recently published articles in Translation Review, Catalan Review, Arizona Journal of Hispanic Cultural Studies and Studies in Hispanic Cinemas, among others. › The cinema of Ventura Pons: Theatricality as a minoritarian device, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 171-184. André de Quadros Boston University, 1 Silber Way, Boston, MA 02215, United States of America Keywords Asian studies, African studies, Muslim studies André de Quadros, conductor, scholar, community musician and human rights activist is a professor of music at Boston University, where he also holds faculty appointments in Asian studies, African studies and Muslim studies. He has been professionally active in more than 40 countries. He is a co-principal investigator in an arts and public health project in Peru and is developing similar projects in India. › Community, communication, social change: Music in dispossessed Indian communities, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 59-70. David Ian Rabey University of Aberystwyth, Department of Theatre, Film and TV, Penglais Campus, Aberystwyth, Ceredigion, SY23 3AJ, United Kingdom Keywords rehearsal strategies, sound effects, choreography, voice, poetry, theatre Professor David Ian Rabey is Professor of Drama and Theatre Studies at Aberystwyth University. David was born in the English Black Country, and lived in America and Dublin, and now lives in Machynlleth. He was formerly lecturer in English & Drama, Trinity College, Dublin (1982-84). and was educated at the Universities of Birmingham and California, Berkeley. Artistic Director of Lurking Truth Theatre Company/Cwmni Gwir Sy’n Llechu, which he cofounded in 1986, and for which he wrote and directed the plays The Back of Beyond (written 1994-95, staged twice in 1996) and The Battle of the Crows (written 1996, staged 1998), published as a single volume The Wye Plays (2004). › Staging , Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.1, 41-54. Duška Radosavljević University of Kent, School of Arts, Drama and Theatre Studies Department, Jarman Building, Canterbury, Kent, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Keywords Wim Wenders, translation, dramaturgy, city, culture Duška Radosavljević is a lecturer in Drama and Theatre Studies at the University of Kent. She has previously worked as a dramaturg, theatre practitioner and theatre critic, and she is editor of the reviews section of the Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance. Her publications include essays on adaptation, dramaturgy and theatre in the Balkans and her current research is on the topic of ensemble theatre.Contact: Drama and Theatre Studies, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7NZ, Kent. › Translating the City: A Community Theatre Version of Wim Wenders’ Wings of Desire in Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.1, 57-70. › Emma Rice in interview with Duška Radosavljevi´, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 89-98. Richard Ralley Edge Hill University, Department of Social and Psychological Sciences, St Helens Road, Ormskirk, Lancashire, L39 4QP, United Kingdom Richard Ralley is a senior lecturer in Psychology at the University of Edge Hill. His research and teaching interests are in cognitive psychology, especially the psychology of perception and action, and the relationship of conscious to unconscious thought. › The Laws of Normal Organic Life or Stanislavski Explained: Towards a scientific account of the subconscious in Stanislavski's system, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.3, 237-260. Keywords psychology, emotion, memory, cognition › Embodying interpretation, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 43-58. › Brecht and the disembodied actor, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 91-110. › Something real is needed: Constructing and dismantling presence, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 203-218. Ashlee Ramsey Arizona State University Keywords ayurveda, martial arts, Sensorial Mediations Ashlee Ramsey is a graduate student in the School of Dance at Arizona State University where she serves as a teaching assistant and has codirected two independent dance performances, Sensorial Mediations in Fall 2010, and A Site-Specific Performance in Spring 2010. Ashlee is currently in Bangalore, India where she is teaching dance and learning the science of ayurveda while researching and training in South Indian dance forms and martial arts at the Attakkalari Centre for Movement. › Somatic voyages: Exploring ego, self and possibilities through the Laban/Bartenieff framework, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 233-250. Susanne Ravn University of Southern Denmark, Institute of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, Campusvej 55, Odense M., 5230, Denmark Dr. Susanne Ravn is Associate Professor at the Institute of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics at the University of Southern Denmark. She combines praxis, ethnography and phenomenology in her scholarly research into dance, and has published several books on issues surrounding dance, movement and learning processes. Ravn is a member of the Nordic Forum for Dance Research board. Keywords phenomenology, multisited fieldwork, weight, sensing › Sensing weight in movement, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 21-34. Laurence Raw Baskent University, Department of English, Ankara, 6530, Turkey Keywords adaptation, Turkey, film studies, pedagogy, cross-cultural studies, Hollywood Laurence Raw teaches in the Department of English at Baskent University, Ankara, Turkey. His recent publications include The Ridley Scott Encyclopedia (Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2009), Nights at the Turkish Theatre (Istanbul: Mitos Boyut Yayınları, 2009), and a book on Nathaniel Hawthorne adaptations (Lanham: Scarecrow Press, 2008). More recently he published Exploring Turkish Cultures (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2011). › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 329-338. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 213-221. › REVIEWS, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 201-215. Matthew Reason York St John University, School of Arts, Lord Mayor's Walk, York, North Yorkshire, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords liveness, memory, methodology, participation, young people Matthew Reason is a senior lecturer in Theatre and Head of MA Studies in Creative Practice at York St. John University. He has written two books, Documentation, Disappearance and the Representation of Live Performance (Palgrave 2006) and The Young Audience: Exploring and Enhancing Children's Experiences of Theatre (Trentham 2010) and is currently working on a collaborative AHRC funded project on kinesthetic empathy. › Young audiences and live theatre, Part 1: Methods, participation and memory in audience research, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.2, 129-146. › Young audiences and live theatre, Part 2: Perceptions of liveness in performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 221-242. Fred J. Rees Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, Department of Music and Arts Technology, Department of Music and Arts Technology, Purdue School of Engineering and Dr. Fred J. Rees is Professor of Music, Chair, and Advisory Board Chair of the Department of Music and Arts Technology at IUPUI. He came to Indianapolis in 1999 from the University of Northern Iowa, where he developed the first graduate music education degree programme in the country to be broadcast at a distance over the state`s interactive television network. He has contributed to adapting the Technology, Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis, 535 W. Michigan Street, IT 391, Indianapolis, Indiana, 46202, IN, United States Master of Science in Music Technology as a live, video-streamed degree programme with worldwide student enrollments. He has also designed the Bachelor of Science in Music Technology degree programme that integrates music technology throughout the curriculum. Prior academic appointments included New York University and the University of Queensland (Australia). His career interests have included distance learning, string education, double bass and piano performance, and music technology.Dr. Rees holds a Doctor of Musical Arts from the University of Southern California and a Bachelor Keywords › Redefining Music Technology in the United States, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 149-155. Sandra Reeve University of Exeter, Westhay, Charmouth, Dorset, DT6 6SD, United Kingdom Keywords dance therapy, ecological performance, movement art Dr. Sandra Reeve is a movement artist, facilitator and teacher who lives in West Dorset. She teaches an annual programme of autobiographical and environmental movement workshops called 'Move into Life' and creates small-scale ecological performances. She is an Honorary Fellow at the University of Exeter, lecturing in Performance and Ecology, and a Movement Psychotherapist, currently offering therapy and supervision in private practice. She first studied with Suryodarmo in Java in 1988 and subsequently worked with him intensively for ten years, based in Java from 1995 to 1998. Their practice together continues to evolve: the first ‘Ecological Body’ workshop collaboration in the United Kingdom took place in June 2009, in Java in January 2011. › Reading, Gardening and ‘Non-Self’: Joged Amerta and its emerging influence on ecological somatic practice, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.2, 189-203. Doug Reside University of Maryland, Mitchell Bldg., College Park, Maryland, United States of America Keywords humanities computing, electronic editions, Parade, Jason Robert Brown, Alfred Uhry Doug Reside earned his Ph.D. from the University of Kentucky in 2006. He is now the Associate Director of the Maryland Institute of Technology in the Humanities (MITH) at the University of Maryland in College Park, Maryland. Reside has directed the technical development work at MITH and has received four major grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities for his tools AXE, CAMP, and TILE and his web archive of musical theatre material, Music Theater Online. His multimedia tagging tool, the AJAX XML Encoder (AXE), released as a prototype in 2007, is now incorporated into several major Digital Humanities projects including the popular reference management tool, Zotero. › Byte by byte, putting it together:electronic editions and the study of musical theatre, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 73-84. James Reynolds University of London, Kingston, Department of Drama, Mile End Road, London, E1 4NS, United Kingdom Keywords adaptation, ideologem, V For Vendetta, anarchism James Reynolds is a lecturer in Drama at Kingston University, London. He is currently completing Ph.D. research investigating performance practices in the theatre of Robert Lepage. His published work includes a chapter on Howard Barker’s direction of his own plays in Theatre of Catastrophe (Oberon, 2006), an article on Lepage’s work, ‘Acting with Puppets and Objects,’ in Performance Research (2007), and an article on comic-to-film adaptation, 'KILL ME SENTIMENT', in The Journal of Adaptation in Film and Performance (2009). › ‘KILL ME SENTIMENT’: V For Vendetta and comic-to-film adaptation, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 121-136. › Ten years on the edge: Phil Fox reflects on a decade of recovery from addiction through applied theatre, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 165-172. Bill Ribbans University of Northampton and The County Clinic, School of Health, The County Clinic, 57 Billing Road, Northampton, United Kingdom Professor Bill Ribbans Ph.D., FRCSOrth, FFSEM (UK) is a Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon at Northampton General Hospital and Visiting Professor at The University of Northampton. He is Honorary Orthopaedic Surgeon to the English National Ballet and involved with many professional sports organisations, particularly involving rugby union, association football, cricket, athletics and badminton. Keywords dance, injuries, ballet, orthopaedics, multi-disciplinary healthcare › Best foot forward: An orthopaedic odyssey through the world of dance1, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 53-61. Karen Richard Murray Royal Hospital, Department of Forensic Psychiatry, Perth, PH2 7BH, Australia Keywords drama, creativity, mental health, forensic psychiatry, mentally disordered offenders Dr. Karen Richard, BSc, MBChB, FRCPsych, is a Consultant Forensic Psychiatrist at the Murray Royal Hospital and has contributed to the Journal of Applied Arts & Health. › A descriptive analysis of a pilot drama project in a forensic psychiatric setting, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 267-280. Tony Richards University of Lincoln, Lincoln School of Media, Brayford Pool, Lincoln, LN6 7TS, United Kingdom Keywords media theory, computer game theory, television theory Tony Richards is a senior lecturer in media theory and production based in the Lincoln School of Media at the University of Lincoln. He teaches both television and new media theory and specializes in deconstructive approaches to various post-human spaces. He has published on computer game theory, applying a deconstructive approach to uncover its properly post-identitarian nature. › Embalmed/unembalmed: Territorial aporias within the performative field of tele-presence, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 77-95. Frances Rifkin Keywords art education, Utopia Arts, community theatre Frances Rifkin, artistic director of Utopia Arts is a cultural worker and director in Political and Community theatre. In the 1970s she was director of Recreation Ground Theatre Company and in the 1980s she was director of Banner Theatre, Birmingham and participated as a theatre activist in the anti-fascist movements, disputes and strikes of the time. She trained extensively with Augusto Boal in the early 1990s and worked as a workshop leader. Between 1992 and 1997, she was lecturer in Community and workshop theatre in Theatre Studies at Warwick and Lancaster Universities. Currently, she is working with a diverse range of communities in East London in partnership with Social Action for Health and Red Earth Consultancy. › The ethics of ParticipatoryTheatre in higher education, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 197-220. Chris Ritchie Southampton solent University, Southampton, Hampshire, United Kingdom Keywords Hugh Grant, Disney, Working Title Films, British arts, comedy, Dick Van Dyke Chris Ritchie created the innovative Comedy: Writing & Performance degree at Solent University in 2006. He has written about and performed stand-up comedy since 1991. He is the author of The Idler & The Dandy In Stage Comedy(Edward Mellen, 2007) and the principal editor of Comedy Studies journal. › England? Whose England? Selling Albion in comic cinema, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 33-42. › REVIEWS-STATUE REVIEW #1: MAX MILLER: “THERE’LL NEVER BE ANOTHER!”, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 125-127. › Against Comedy, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 159-168. › Editorial, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 139-140. › Reviews, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 219-223. › REVIEWS, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 89-94. › ‘Only Mugs Work’: The spivin British comedy, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 13-20. › EDITORIAL, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 3-. › Ed Aczel: Reluctant comedian, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 179-183. › REVIEWS, Comedy Studies, 2.2, 185-189. Sol B. River Keywords scriptwriting, directing, film, documentary Sol completed an MA in Scriptwriting before taking up the position of Writer-in-Residence at The West Yorkshire Playhouse (1993-95). Sol’s work to date includes Moor Masterpieces 1994 (West Yorkshire Playhouse), Ganga Psychosis 1995, The Rat 1995, Anaxos Gaspenster Lydora 1995, and 'The White Witch of Rose Hall 1998, for The University of The West Indies 50th anniversary celebration. Also, To Rahtid 1996, The Young Vic Studio 1998, River Plays 1 published by Oberon Books, 2004 and River Plays 2, published by Oberon Books. › Serious Business, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.1, 85-90. David Robb Queen’s University of Belfast, School of Languages, Literatures and Performing Arts, 10 University Square, Belfast, BT7 1NN, United Kingdom Keywords censorship, clowns, carnival, comedy David Robb is a senior lecturer in German at Queen’s University of Belfast. He came to Belfast in 1999 after doing post-doctoral research at the University of Sheffield and the Humboldt University. His main areas of research lie in German music and song and also in the figure of the clown in literature, film and drama. He is also a singer/songwriter who has performed extensively in Germany. His main publications to date are: Zwei Clowns im Lande des verlorenen Lachens. Das Liedertheater Wenzel & Mensching (Berlin: Ch. Links-Verlag, 1998); Protest Song in East and West Germany since the 1960s (Rochester/NY: Camden House, 2007) and Clowns, Fools and Picaros. Popular Forms in Theatre, Fiction and Film (editor) (Amsterdam/New York: Rodopi, 2007). › Court jesters of the GDR: the political clownstheatre of Wenzel & Mensching, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 85-100. David Roberts David Roberts is Professor and Head of English at Birmingham City University. His biography of Thomas Betterton is published by Birmingham City University, School of English, City North Campus, Birmingham, B42 2SU, United Kingdom Cambridge University Press in 2010, while his revised edition of Defoe’s A Journal of the Plague Year is forthcoming from Oxford, also in 2010. Keywords Henry Harris, Thomas Betterton, seventeenth century, acting, › Social status and the actor: The case of Thomas Betterton, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 173-185. Alec Robertson United Kingdom Keywords emergence, collaboration, transdisciplinary, art-technology, cliques, applied choreography Alec Robertson of the Department of Imaging & Communication Design at De Montfort University, Leicester is interested in dissemination problems of design research, innovation modelling and 4D design. He is also an independant consultant. He has organized numerous design research events. › Introduction Part 3: Complexity: The theory into the practice, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 237-238. › Emergence and complexity: Some observations and reflections on transdisciplinary research involving performative contexts and new media, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 239252. › An approach to the design of interactive environments, with reference to choreography, architecture, the science of complex systems and 4D design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 281-. George Rodosthenous University of Leeds, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords Billy Elliot, masculinity, male dancers, dance, musical theatre, representations of the male George Rodosthenous is lecturer in music theatre at the School of Performance and Cultural Industries of the University of Leeds. He is the artistic director of the theatre company Altitude North and also works as a freelance composer/director for the theatre. His research interests are the body in performance, refining improvisational techniques and compositional practices for performance, devising pieces with live musical soundscapes as interdisciplinary process, updating Greek Tragedy and The British Musical. He is currently working on the book Theatre as Voyeurism: The Pleasure(s) of Watching. › Billy Elliot The Musical: visual representations of working-class masculinity and the all-singing, all-dancing bo[d]y, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 275292. › In between stage and screen: The intermedial in Katie Mitchell's some trace of her, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 7.1, 43-59. Helena Rodrigues University of Lisbon, Faculty of Social Sciences, Av. de Berna, 26 C,, 1069 061 Lisboa, Lisbon, Portugal Keywords prison, ‘BebéBabá’, motherhood, early childhood, gender studies Helena Rodrigues is Professor of Psychology of Music and Music Pedagogy and in charge of Laboratory for Music and Communication in Infancy at New University of Lisbon. She is also Artistic Director of Companhia de Música Teatral, a music group that has been pioneering educational, interdisciplinary and music community artistic projects in Portugal. She has been presenting workshops and lectures in Portugal, Spain, United States of America, Belgium, Canada, United Kingdom and Poland. › Music for mothers and babies living in a prison: A report on a special production of ‘BebéBabá’, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 77-90. David Roesner Exeter University, Department of Drama, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, Devon, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary arts, music, theatre, Dido and Aeneas, performance, intermediality, composed theatre, interarts, process analysis, rehearsals, emergence, Bakhtin, incidental music, typecasting David Roesner is a senior lecturer in Drama at Exeter University. In 2002 he finished his Ph.D. at the University of Hildesheim, Germany, on ‘Theatre as Music’ analyzing principles and strategies of musicalization in productions by Christoph Marthaler, Einar Schleef and Robert Wilson. He taught at the Universities of Hildesheim, Bern and Mainz. Recently, he won the Thurnau Award for Music Theatre Studies (2007) for his article ‘The politics of the polyphony of performance’, which was later published with Contemporary Theatre Review (2008). In 2009 he conducted an AHRC funded project on ‘Composed Theatre’ together with Matthias Rebstock (Hildesheim). David Roesner also works as a theatre musician and director. › Singing actors and dancing singers: Oscillations of genre, physical and vocal codes in two contemporary adaptations of Purcell's Dido and Aeneas, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 123-138. › Musicking as mise-en-scne, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 89-101. › Musicality as a paradigm for the theatre: a kind of manifesto, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 293-306. › Bending gender and acting theory: Performing essays by Goethe and Cocteau on the theatrical benefits of cross-dressing, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.2, 111-128. Debbie Rohwer University of North Texas, 1155 Union Circle #311367, Denton, 76203-5017, United States of America Debbie Rohwer is Professor of Music Education and serves as the Chair of the Division of Music Education at the University of North Texas. Dr. Rohwer received her bachelor’s degrees in flute performance and music education at Northwestern University, her master’s degree in Music Education at the Eastman School of Music, and her Ph.D. degree in Music Education at the Ohio State University. Keywords choir, community, music Dr. Rohwer teaches methods courses and supervises student teachers at the undergraduate level, and teaches the research and statistics courses at the graduate level. She currently serves as Chair of the Adult and Community Music Education Special Research Interest Group for MENC. › A content analysis of choral students' participation perceptions: implications for lifelong learning, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 255-262. › Understanding adult interests and needs: the pitfalls in wanting to know, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 203-212. › Community music as a part of higher education: Decisions from a department chair/researcher, International Journal of Community Music, 4.2, 121-131. Mark Rohwer Keywords lifelong learning, choir, community music Dr. Mark Rohwer is Chair of Music and Director of Choral Activities at Flower Mound High School in Flower Mound, Texas. Dr. Rohwer has taken his choirs to state, national and international performance venues, and continues to receive the highest ratings at state contests every year. › A content analysis of choral students' participation perceptions: implications for lifelong learning, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 255-262. Tanya Ronder Keywords theatre, Peter Pan, young people theatre Tanya Ronder moved from acting to writing for theatre in 2002 and her adaptations include Lope de Vega’s Peribanez (Young Vic), Lorca’s Blood Wedding (Almeida), Ionesco’s Macbett (RSC), Romeo and Juliet (Vestuport), Saint-Exupéry’s Night Flight (Muztheater), DBC Pierre’s Vernon God Little (nominated for an Olivier Award, Young Vic). Her current work includes Peter Pan in a 1200-seater tent in Kensington Gardens, De Filippo’s Filumena, Almeida, and a play for teenagers, devised with them at the Almeida. Her short film, King Bastard, was supported by BBC/UKFC, and she is currently writing her first feature, Random, developed by UKFC. › Kind Regards, Leanne, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 39-44. Douglas Rosenberg University of Wisconsin-Madison, Art Dept, 6241 Humanities Building, 455 North Park Street, Madison, Wisconsin, 53706, United States of America Keywords film, dance, critical theory Douglas Rosenberg is an EMMY-nominated director and the recipient of the prestigious Phelan Art Award in Video. He was awarded the Director’s Prize at the International Jewish Video Festival for his film My Grandfather Dances with choreographer Anna Halprin, and received an IZZIE Award for his work on the intermedia project, Singing Myself a Lullaby. He is well-known for his collaborations with choreographers including Molissa Fenley, Sean Curran, Ellen Bromberg, Joe Goode, Li Chiao-Ping, Eiko and Koma and others. Rosenberg’s most recent film, Of the Heart, was a finalist for the Jury Prize at the Dance on Camera Festival in New York and has been screened at numerous festivals around the world. › Curating the practice/the practice of curating, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.2&3, 75-87. Lisa Rossetti › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 187-198. Keywords Stephen Rothman California State University, Department of Theatre, Arts and Dance, 5151 State University Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90032, United States of America Keywords Los Angeles theatre, choreography, directing Stephen Rothman is no stranger to Los Angeles theatre, where he makes his home. He is best known by California audiences for his work as Founder and Artistic Leader of the revitalized Pasadena Playhouse. He also served as Artistic Director of the Sacramento Theatre Company. His directing career has taken him across the country and around the world, including for a 2008 production of Harold Pinter’s Betrayal in Florence, Italy for the Florence International Theatre Company. His American Resident/Regional Theatrecredits include more than 100 plays in sixteen different states for 40 different theatre companies. › ‘Isn’t It Ironic’: The films ofthe Coen Brothers, Comedy Studies, 2.1, 55-62. Sasha Roubicek Sasha trained at London Contemporary Dance School 1982–86. In 1987, she co-founded Reflex Dance Company with Paul Douglas, with whom she toured internationally. She has performed with Motionhouse Dance Theatre, Yolande Snaith Theatre Dance and Siobhan Davies Dance Company. Sasha was a founding member of Small Bones Dance Company, directed by Paul Douglas. Sasha has led master classes for many dance companies including Siobhan Davies Dance Company, DV8 and Shobana Jeyasingh Dance Company and has taught in vocational dance schools and studios, in the United States, Russia, Britain, Scandinavia and Europe. Sasha is artistic adviser to Movingeast and an instructor of Aikido at Tetsushinkan Dojo – she is graded third dan. In 2007 she was awarded the Lisa Ullman Scholarship to study Aikido in Japan. Sasha is presently lecturing in Release-based Dance Practice and the work of Siobhan Davies, at London Contemporary Dance School and is a Postgraduate student. Keywords somatics, Aikido, hara, dance, martial arts › Hara breathing applied to dance practice, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 255-262. Nick Rowe York St John University, Lord Mayor’s Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords stigma, pedagogy, social inclusion, theatre, mental health Nick Rowe is a senior lecturer at York St John University where he teaches in the Faculty of Health and Life Sciences and in the Faculty of Arts. With a background in psychiatric nursing and dramatherapy, Rowe is particularly interested in the relationships between theatre and mental health. He is a performing member of Playback Theatre York and is the author of Playing the Other: Dramatizing Personal Narratives in Playback Theatre (2007). › Border crossings: Arts and health work in a university, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 241-250. › REVIEWS, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 93-101. › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Duncan Rowland University of Lincoln, School of Computer Science, Brayford Pool, Lincoln, LN6 7TS, United Kingdom Keywords replay, metadata, information architecture, archiving, participation, interactivity Duncan Rowland is Senior Research Fellow in Social Computing at the Mixed Reality Laboratory, in the Department of Computer Science at the University of Nottingham. Originally gaining a Ph.D. from the University of St Andrews' School of Psychology, his research interests are now broad, but centre around the development of new technology experiences and their real world deployment (with particular reference to the entertainment industry). He has published over 40 scholarly works, led commercial development teams on PS2/XBox AAA game titles, and has had his work exhibited at a variety of conferences and galleries (including CHI, SIGGRAPH UbiComp, Scottish National Portrait Gallery, Exeter Phoenix and the London Institute for Contemporary Art). › Riders Have Spoken: A practice-based approach to developing an information architecture for the archiving and replay of a mixed reality performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 209-223. Sarah Rubidge University of Chichester, Bognor Regis Campus, Upper Bognor Road, Bognor Regis, West Sussex, PO21 1HR, United Kingdom Keywords space, the diagram, topology, geography, choreography, performance Sarah Rubidge is Professor of Choreography and New Media at the University of Chichester. A practitioner-scholar she specializes in developing digital choreographic installations that use the haptic senses as the primary medium of understanding. Sarah has also created works which can accommodate improvisational choreographies of space that become integral choreographic elements of the installation environment. Sarah has published extensively: her writing addresses the philosophical ideas that are embodied in her choreographic practice. She also lectures and conducts dance and new media workshops both nationally and internationally. › Nomadic diagrams: Choreographic topologies, Choreographic Practices, 1.1, 43-56. Kristen Rudisill Bowling Green State University, Department of Popular Culture, 108 Popular Culture Building, Bowling Green, Ohio, 43403-0190, United States of America Kristen Rudisill is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Popular Culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio. She has a Ph.D. in Asian Studies from the University of Texas, Austin and a MA from the Divinity School at the University of Chicago. Her research interests are primarily in South Asian performing arts and she is currently completing a book manuscript on Chennai’s sabha theatre and working on a new project about film dance competitions in India. Keywords Disney, India, Bollywood, dance, competition, High School Musical, popular culture › ‘My School Rocks!’ Dancing Disney's High School Musical in India, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 253-271. Xu Ruisen The Open University of China, Beijing, China, Department of Continuing Education, The Open Xu Ruisen is Director of the Research Center for Community Education, at the Open University of China. She worked as Deputy Secretary General of Continuing Education Association in China Open Universities, and as Deputy Director for the Department of Continuing Education in the Open University of China. University of China, No. 160 Fuxingmennei Street,, Beijing, 100031, China › The charm of community music, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 23-27. Keywords community music, community education, Open University Susan Russell Penn State University, 201 Shields Building, University Park, Pennsylvania, 16802, United States of America Keywords corporate theatre, frozen performance Susan Russell is an Assistant Professor in the School of Theatre at The Pennsylvania State University in State College, PA, where she teaches graduate and undergraduate literature/criticism, playwriting, and Musical Theatre History. She received her Ph.D. in Theatre Studies from Florida State University’s School of Theatre in 2007, her MA degree from Florida State University in 2003, and her BA in Theatre from St. Andrews Presbyterian College in Laurinburg, NC in 1979. She was also a curriculum creator for New York City Opera, where she created and developed arts based education programs designed to meet the specific needs of selected elementary, middle, and high school programs. Dr. Russell is the author of a new book called Body Language: Cultural Conversations Reaching Out and Reaching In, and a new journal called Cultural Conversations: Works in Progress and Writers in the Making. › The performance of discipline on Broadway, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 97-108. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 227-235. ROGER SABIN Central St Martin’s College of Art & Design, Central St Martin’s College of Art & Design, Southampton Row, London, WC1B 4AP, United Kingdom Keywords punk, pop culture, comic books Roger Sabin is Reader in Popular Culture at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, University of the Arts London. He is editor of Punk Rock: So What? (Routledge, 1999) and Consulting Editor Punk and Post-Punk. His other work in the world of pop culture has involved comic books: he is the author of Adult Comics: An Introduction (Routledge), and Comics, Comix and Graphic Novels (Phaidon). Literary adaptations include the co-authoring of The Lasting of the Mohicans (University Press of Mississippi) and American TV crime drama (co-authored book forthcoming from McFarland Press). › Interview with Stephen Duncombe and Maxwell Tremblay, editors of White Riot: Punk Rock and the Politics of Race, Punk & Post Punk, 1.1, 105-110. Olivia Sagan University of the Arts, London, The Centre for Learning & Teaching in Art & Design, 6th Floor, 272 High Holborn, London, WC1V 7EY, United Kingdom Dr. Olivia Sagan is Senior Research Fellow (Pedagogy) at the University of the Arts, London. She is interested in the interface of formal and community-based education and her research questions the potential of each, individually or in partnership, to address issues of social inequity. › Thou Art: The multiple gaze of audio-visual, community-based participatory research, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 125-136. Keywords creativity, emotion, identity, space, transitional Elizabeth Sakellaridou Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Department of English Literature, 540 06 Thessaloniki, Greece Keywords comparative drama, gender studies, cultural studies Elizabeth Sakellaridou is Professor of Drama at the Department of English, Aristotle University, Greece. She holds an MA in English Literature (University of Leeds) and a Ph.D. in English Drama (RHC, University of London). She teaches and researches in English and comparative drama and gender and cultural studies. Her main publications are Pinter’s Female Portraits (London: Macmillan, 1988) and contributions to the volumes English Studies in Transition, ed. by Robert Clark and Dimitris Tziovas (Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, 1997) and Daughters of Restlessness, ed. by G. Reisner, H. Wallinger and S. Coelsch-Foisner (forthcoming, 1997). She has also published widely in Greek and international journals. › New Faces for British Political Theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.1, 43-. Miikka Salavuo Sibelius Academy, P.O. Box 86, Helsinki, 251, Finland Keywords social networking, online culture, informal learning, Web 2.0, music education Miikka Salavuo completed his Ph.D. at the University of Jyväskylä, Finland, majoring in Music Education. He has worked the ongoing decade in the field of music education technology, with emphasis on online and blended learning. He now works at the Sibelius Academy as a senior researcher, and is the chairman of the Finnish Society of Music Education Technology. › Social media as an opportunity for pedagogical change in music education, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 121-136. Roberto Sánchez-Camus › The art of dying: Aesthetics and palliative care, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.2, 155-164. Keywords Andrea Sangiorgio Centro Didattico Musicale, Via delle Egadi, 42, Rome, 141, Italy Keywords well-being, inclusion, music education, anthropological approach, Orff-Schulwerk Andrea Sangiorgio graduated in Music and Movement Education at the Orff-Institute, University ‘Mozarteum’, Salzburg, Austria. He also holds a MA in Ethnomusicology. He currently teaches training courses throughout Italy and abroad in such areas as elemental music and dance education (Orff-Schulwerk approach), voice training for children, ensemble music for percussion instruments, group improvisation and cognitive aspects of music learning. He is currently director and music teacher of the CDM Centro Didattico Musicale, Rome. › Bambini al Centro: Music as a means to promote wellbeing. Birth and configuration of an experience, International Journal of Community Music, 1.3, 311-318. Toni Sant University of Hull, School of Arts and New Media, Scarborough Campus, Filey Rd, Scarborogh, YO11 3AZ, United Kingdom Keywords internet, text-based chat, MMORPGs, 3Dwiki Dr. Toni Sant is Director of Research at the University of Hull’s School of Arts & New Media, on the Scarborough Campus, where he also lectures on Performance and Creative Technologies. He is the author of the book Franklin Furnace & the Spirit of the Avant-Garde: A History of the Future (Intellect, 2010), which he worked on with support from the AHRC. He is also the Book Reviews Editor of the International Journal of Performance Arts & Digital Media. › A Second Life for online performance: Understanding present developments through an historical context, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 69-79. › Addressing the need for a collaborative multimedia database of Maltese music, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 89-96. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 185-194. Ivani Santana University of Bahia, Research Group for Technological Poetics in Dance, Rua Santa Rita de Cassia Ivani Santana is a dancer and choreographer working in the field of dance-technology since 1994. She holds a MA and a Ph.D. in Communication and Semiotics from Pontifícia Univerisidade Católica (Catholic University), São Paulo, Brazil. She is a professor at the Department of Theory and Choreographic Creation of the School of 29/901/Graça, Salvador, Bahia, 40150-010, Brazil Dance and the Graduate Program in the Performing Arts (Theatre and Dance), Universidade Federal da Bahia (Federal University of Bahia). She has created and directed the Technological Poetics in Dance Research Project since its inception in 2004 as well as the Laboratory for Advanced Research on the Human Body since 2000. Keywords body, cognition, movement, real time, immersion, interactivity › Ambiguous zones: The intertwining of dance and world in the technological era, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 153170. Graham Saunders University of Reading, Film Theatre and Television, Bulmershe Court, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 1HY, United Kingdom Keywords Beckett, Edward Bond, political theatre, theatre Graham Saunders is a lecturer in Theatre Studies at the University of Reading. His main research and teaching interests focus on contemporary British drama, with particular emphasis on the work of writers from the 1990s. He specializes in the work of Sarah Kane, Edward Bond and Howard Barker. He also works on the relationship between Elizabethan/Jacobean theatre and contemporary British dramatists, and Samuel Beckett, with particular emphasis on adaptations of his stage work in other media. He is Principal Investigator for the AHRC award, 'Giving Voice to the Nation': the Arts Council of Great Britain and the development of theatre and performance in Britain 1945-1995. This five-year project is an investigation of the extensive archive of the Arts Council housed at the Victoria & Albert Museum's Theatre Collection. › ‘A theatre of ruins’. Edward Bond and Samuel Beckett: theatrical antagonists, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 67-. Jonathan Savage MMU, Institute of Education, Manchester Metropolitan University, 799 Wilmslow Road, Didsbury, Manchester, M20 2RR, UK Keywords improvisation, internet, music technology, new instrument design, pedagogy Jonathan Savage is a Reader in Education at the Institute of Education, Manchester Metropolitan University. He has a number of research interests, including implementing new technologies in education, crosscurricular approaches to teaching and learning, creativity and assessment. He is Managing Director of Ucan.tv (www.ucan.tv), a notfor-profit company that produces educational software and hardware including Sound2Picture, Sound2Game and Hand2Hand. He is a widely published author having written and edited for Routledge, Open University Press, SAGE and Learning Matters. Jonathan runs an active blog at www.jsavage.org.uk and can be followed on Twitter @jpjsavage. › DubDubDub: Improvisation using the sounds of the World Wide Web, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 83-. › Reviews, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 167-185. › Hand2Hand and Dot2Dot: developing instruments for the music classroom, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 141-157. › Tom's story: Developing music education with technology, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 217-226. Matthew Saxton United Kingdom Keywords adult-child interaction, Child Directed Speech (CDS), repetition, incongruity, nonsense Matthew Saxton is a senior lecturer in Psychology and Human Development at the Institute of Education, London. His research interests are in the field of child language acquisition and include the role of input and interaction and their integration within theories of grammar development. He is the author of ‘The inevitability of Child Directed Speech’, in S. Foster-Cohen (ed.), (2009) Advances in Language Acquisition, London: Palgrave Macmillan, and Child Language: Acquisition and development, London: Sage; published in 2010. › The origins of comic performance in adultchild interaction, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 21-32. Kerrie Schaefer University of Exeter, School of Arts, Languages and Literatures, Drama Department, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords performance, Australia, culture Kerrie Schaefer completed her Ph.D. in the Department of Performance Studies, University of Sydney, and taught for eight years in the Drama Department of the University of Newcastle, NSW. She was a member of the Performance, Community Development and Social Change research group (led by David Watt) and the Place and Performance research group (led by Gay McAuley). In 2007, she relocated to the United Kingdom to take up a position in the Drama Department at the University of Exeter. › ‘This is my country! This is my country?’: Stalker Theatre Company’s Incognita and the auto-ethnographic turn in postdramatic, site-based Australian theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 197-211. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 361-371. Veronika Schandl Pázmány Péter Catholic University, Veronika Schandl graduated from Pázmány Péter Catholic University in 1999, where she has been teaching ever since. She obtained her Ph.D. at ELTE, in 2006. Her dissertation dealt with Socialist English, Egyetem u. 1., Piliscsaba, 2087, Hungary productions of Shakespeare’s problem comedies. In 2007 she received a research grant from Notre Dame University, Indiana and was the Fulbright visiting professor at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. Her recent book entitled Shakespeare’s Plays on the Stages of Late Kádárist Hungary – Shakespeare Behind the Iron Curtain (Lewinston: The Edwin Mellen Press, 2008) was published in 2009. She is a member of most European Shakespeare research organisations and is on the editorial board of the Brno Studies in English. Currently she is working on two projects: on a Hungarian volume discussing the Kádár-regime reception of Shakespeare in Hungary and on literary censorship in Hungary of the 1980s. Keywords Shakespeare, problem comedies, literary censorship › CROSSING TIME AND SPACE: SHAKESPEARE TRANSLATIONS IN PRESENT-DAY EUROPE, CARLA DENTE AND SARA SONCINI (eds.) (2008), Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 103-105. Greg Scheer Calvin Institute of Christian Worship, Calvin College, 1855 Knollcrest Circle SE, Grand Rapids, MI, 495464402, United States of America Keywords praise, worship, evangelical, contemporary arts, Christianity, music Greg Scheer is Minister of Worship at Church of the Servant in Grand Rapids and Music Associate at the Calvin Institute of Christian Worship. His writings include The Art of Worship: A Musician’s Guide to Leading Modern Worship (Baker Books, 2006) and contributions to Reformed Worship, The Hymn, Call to Worship, Worship Leader, Perspectives, and the forthcoming New Songs of Celebration Render (GIA, edited by C. Michael Hawn). › A musical ichthus: Praise & worship and Evangelical identity, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 91-97. Gretchen Schiller Brunel University, School of Arts, Kingston Lane, Uxbridge, Middlesex, UB8 3PH, United Kingdom Keywords interactive art, kinaesthesis, movement, interactivity, embodiment Gretchen Schiller is a choreographer who works in the field of media dance, videodance, participatory installations and movement environments. She has produced various projects in residency at the Banff Centre of the Arts (Camara ’96, Shifting Ground ’99, trajets ‘00 and the Raumspielpuzzle workshops ’03) and her works have toured in North America and Europe. Gretchen Schiller received her BA from the University of Calgary, Canada in Dance and French Canadian studies followed by a MA from the UCLA, California, US in Choreography, and Ph.D. from the University of Plymouth, UK in Interactive Arts. She directed the Diplôme Création Audiovisuelle Numérique for seven years at the Université Paul Valéry, Montpellier III, France and has taught workshops in Canada, Germany, England and France. She is the artistic director of Mo-vi-da, which supports the creative research in mediadance and interactive arts. › Awakening the 'dynamic index of the body': linking movement awareness methods with interactive art practice, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.3, 179-188. Thecla Schiphorst Simon Fraser University, School of Interactive Arts and Technology, 250 - 13450 102nd Avenue, Surrey, British Columbia, V3T 0A3, Canada Keywords wearable technologies, digital media, human–computer interaction, embodiment, contextual performance practices, digital culture Thecla Schiphorst is Media Artist, and an Associate Professor in the School of Interactive Arts and Technology at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada. Her formal education and training in computing and dance form the interdisciplinary basis of her work, which integrates experiential physical practices and methodologies with computational models of representation. She is a member of the original design team that developed Life Forms, the computer compositional tool for choreography and has worked with Merce Cunningham since 1990 supporting his creation of new dance with the computer. She is the recipient of the 1998 PetroCanada award in New Media awarded biennially to a Canadian artist, by the Canada Council for the Arts. › Breath, skin and clothing: Using wearable technologies as an interface into ourselves, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.2, 171-186. Jesse Schlotterbeck University of Iowa, Cinema and Comparative Literature, 2nd Floor, Adler Building, Iowa City, IA 52240, United States of America Jesse Schlotterbeck, a film studies Ph.D. from the University of Iowa, recently defended his dissertation on American musical biopics from the 1960s to present. He has also published in Scope: An Online Journal of Film and Television Studies, the Journal of Popular Film and Television, the Encyclopedia of Documentary Film (Routledge, 2005), and M/C – A Journal of Media and Culture. Keywords radio drama, film, adaptation, Robert Siodmak, The Killers › Killing noir?: The adaptation of Robert Siodmak’s The Killers to radio, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.1, 59-70. Roberta Freund Schwartz Roberta Freund Schwartz is an associate professor of historical University of Kansas, 1450 Jayhawk Boulevard, Lawrence, KS, 660454401, United States of America musicology at the University of Kansas, and advising director of the University of Kansas Archive of Recorded Sound. Her areas of specialization include the music of the Spanish Renaissance, patronage studies, and African American popular music – jazz, blues, gospel, and rock and roll. She has produced articles on: the Spanish melomane and Keywords The Music Man, Meredith Willson, musicals composer Saint Francis of Borja; the patronage of music by the Spanish nobility in the Renaissance; sexual euphemism in the blues; Meredith Willson’s The Music Man; and the role that British jazz critics played in popularizing African American music in that country. › Iowa Stubborn: Meredith Willson's musical characterization of his fellow Iowans, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 31-41. Judith A Sebesta University of Missouri, College of Arts & Science, 317 Lowry Hall, Columbia, Missouri, MO 652116080, United States of America Keywords reception, authenticity, racism, The Capeman, Utopiarevue Judith Sebesta is Professor and Chair of the Department of Theatre and Dance at Lamar University, and serves as Performance Review Editor of Theatre Journal. Her articles on musical theatre have appeared in such publications as the second edition of The Cambridge Companion to the Musical, Studies in American Culture, Studies in Musical Theatre, Contemporary Theatre Review, New England Theatre Journal, Theatre Annual, and the Sondheim Review, and her co-edited anthology Women in American Musical Theatre was published in 2008 by McFarland Press. › Just ‘another Puerto Rican with a knife’? Racism and reception on the 'Great White Way', Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 183-198. › Ziegfeld, Bagley, Sillman, and Cranko: The Revue in the 1956–57 Season On and Off-Broadway, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 117-125. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 219-226. Judith Sebesta Lamar University, Department of Theatre & Dance, P.O. Box 10110, Beaumont, Texas, TX 77710, United States of America Keywords Show Boat, identity, Riverdance, authenticity, Bruce Kirle Judith Sebesta is Chair and Professor of Theatre at Lamar University. Her articles on musical theatre have appeared in such publications as the second edition of The Cambridge Companion to the Musical, Studies in Musical Theatre, Studies in American Culture, Contemporary Theatre Review, New England Theatre Journal, Theatre Annual, and the Sondheim Review. Her essay ‘“I’ll Cover You”: An Interdisciplinary Duet on Rent and Collaborative Musical Theatre Historiography’, co-authored with Jessica Sternfeld, in Theater Historiography: Critical Interventions, was published in November 2010 by the University of Michigan Press. Her co-authored, all-digital textbook for Theatre Appreciation courses also came out in December 2010, and she is co-editor, with Bud Coleman, of Women in American Musical Theatre. She is past performance review editor of Theatre Journal and served as chairATHENews › Introduction to Bruce Kirle Memorial Panel debut papers in music-theatre- dance, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 307-309. Lesley Seeger York Teaching Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, The York Hospital, Wigginton Road, York, YO31 8HE, United Kingdom Lesley Seeger is a professional artist working on the renal unit at York Hospital and has painted full time for the past 15 years. Lesley is a qualified art therapist with experience of using the creative process in a variety of therapeutic settings including the NHS and NSPCC. She joined the Art and Design Team in 2006 as Art Development Worker in the renal units of York, Easingwold and Harrogate hospitals. Keywords art therapy, art development › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Laurence Senelick Tufts University, Department of Drama and Dance, Aidekman 201, Medford, Massachusetts, MA 02155, United States of America Keywords family, property, estates, Russian drama Laurence Senelick is Fletcher Professor of Drama at Tufts University and a recipient of the St George medal of the Ministry of Culture of the Russian Federation for services to Russian art and scholarship. He is the author of Anton Chekhov (Macmillan Modern Dramatists) and The Chekhov Theatre: A Century of the Plays in Performance (Cambridge University Press), which won the Barnard Hewitt Award of the American Society for Theatre Research. He edited and translated The Complete Plays of Anton Chekhov (W.W. Norton). › Money in Chekhov's plays, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 327337. Mark Cariston Seton The University of Sydney, Department of Performance Studies, Lobby H, Main Quadrangle A14, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia Dr. Seton is an Honorary Research Associate, Department of Performance Studies, University of Sydney, Australia. He is also Chair of the Health Promotion Subcommittee of the Australian Society for Performing Arts Healthcare (ASPAH). He has been a member of the Human Ethics Research Committee of the Australian College of Theology for the past eight years. Keywords vulnerability, ethics, embodiment, actor training, intercorporeality › The ethics of embodiment: actor training and habitual vulnerability, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 5-20. Ruth Shade The Roseries, Cwmbach Road, Aberdare, Mid Glamorgan, CF44 0PA, United Kingdom Keywords female comedians, Welsh arts, carnivale, gender studies, comedy, ethics, performance Originally from south Wales, Ruth Shade was until 2010 the Head of Department and principal lecturer in Drama at the University of Wolverhampton. Her specialist teaching areas are storytelling theatre, popular performance and comedy. Her research interests are women and comedy, popular performance and English-language performance practices in Wales. She is the author of Communication Breakdowns: Theatre, Performance, Rock Music and Some Other Welsh Assemblies (2004), published by the University of Wales Press. She has presented academic papers and written about comedy and popular culture. In 2010, she returned to south Wales, where she is a freelance teacher, lecturer and researcher/writer. › Take my mother-in-law: ‘old bags’, comedy and the sociocultural construction of the older woman, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 71-83. Lee Shangping Keywords augmented reality, virtual reality, theatre masks, virtual masks, Gopal Baratham Shang Ping Lee obtained his BEng (Mechanical and Production Engineering) and MSc (Mechatronics) at the Nanyang Technological University in 1997, and the National University of Singapore in 2001, respectively. He worked at IBM Singapore Pte. Ltd from 1997-99, and then at SGP Global Technologies in 2000 before starting his research career at the National University of Singapore as a research engineer in 2001. He then joined the Interaction and Entertainment Research Centre at Nanyang Technological University in 2005 where he has worked on several interactive digital media projects. › Digitally augmented reality characters in live theatre performances, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 35-49. Robert Shaughnessy School of Arts, Jarman Building, University of Kent, Canterbury, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Keywords Le Hot Club du Cinq, graduate studies Robert began his academic career at the University of the West of England where he taught Drama and English, co-founded the Bristolbased music theatre ensemble Le Hot Club du Cinq, for whom he both wrote and performed (Holiday, 1989 and Voltaire’s Brain, 1990). He is currently on the editorial boards of Literature Compass and Shakespeare, and regularly acts as a reader for Palgrave, Cambridge University Press, Wiley-Blackwell, and Routledge. He also acts as Director of Graduate Studies for the School of Arts, and has previously been Director of Research for Drama and Theatre Studies, and Director of Graduate Studies for the Faculty of Humanities. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.3, 329-338. Jennifer G. Sheridan BigDog Interactive, London, United Kingdom Keywords playful arenas, poi, hyperphysical interfaces, senses, tangibles, user experience design, physicality Dr. Jennifer G. Sheridan is a Senior User Experience Consultant and Director of User Experience at BigDog Interactive with over twenty years experience in functional prototyping and design for global clients ranging from Nokia and the Technology Strategy Board to the Science Museum London. She holds a Ph.D. in Computer Science, MSc in Human-Computer Interaction, and BA in Rhetoric and Professional Writing with a Computer Graphics specialization. She is passionate about producing highly creative design solutions and in delivering cutting-edge, easy to use interfaces that meet customer requirements. Consultancy is run through her company BigDog Interactive. Jennifer's research explores the intersection of Live Art. Computing and HumanComputer Interaction, or Digital Live Art. › New shapes on the dance floor: influencing ambient sound and vision with computationally augmented poi, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 67-. › Editorial, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 217-220. › The interior life of iPoi: Objects that entice witting transitions in performative behaviour, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 17-36. › Editorial, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 3-6. Eric Shieh Columbia University, Department of Curriculum & Teaching, Teachers College, 525 W. 120th St, New York, NY 10027, United States of America Keywords correctional education, music education, critical pedagogy, punishment, soundscape Eric Shieh is completing an Ed.M. in Curriculum and Teaching at Teachers College, Columbia University, where he also directs the Global Initiative for Social Change through the Arts. A national associate of the Prison Creative Arts Project, he has taught both music and creative writing in Detroit and St Louis correctional facilities as well as instrumental music in several St Louis City schools. His articles have been published in the Music Educators Journal, Philosophy of Music Education Review, Missouri Music Educators Magazine, Soundpost and Lee Bartel’s Questioning the Music Education Paradigm. › On punishment and music education: Towards a practice for prisons and schools, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 19-32. Mari Shiobara Dr. Mari Shiobara is Professor of Music Education at Kunitachi College of Music. Educated in both Japan and the United Kingdom, Kunitachi College of Music, 5-5-1 Kashiwa-cho, Tachikawa, Tokyo, Japan she studied piano performance at the Royal Academy of Music and received both her MA and Ph.D. in music education from the University of London, Institute of Education. While in London she also earned a Dalcroze Licentiate from the London Dalcroze Society. She is actively involved in community music activities as a practitioner as well as researcher and is currently investigating the transmission process of Japanese folk song traditions in community settings as well as schools. Dr. Shiobara has also been involved in music therapy work for children and adults with special needs organized by community centres and parents' associations. She currently serves as a commission member for ISME's Community Music Activity Commission. Keywords piano performance, music education, Japanese folk song › Transferring community music into the classroom: Some issues concerning the pedagogy of Japanese traditional music, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 29-37. Jennifer Shryane Keywords Einstürzende Neubauten, Artaud, experimental music, performance Jennifer Shryane has taught Performance Studies since 1969 in a variety of institutions and currently works with students with disabilities at Chester University. Her Ph.D. (University of Liverpool) was on Einstürzende Neubauten. She has an article on the group's Supporter Initiative published in Popular Music Journal and is finishing a book on Neubauten for Ashgate Publishing. › Sprich zu mir in Seuchensprache/Speak to me in plague language (Vanadium-i-ching 1983): An analysis of Einstrzende Neubauten as Artaudian artists, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 323-340. Aleks Sierz Rose Bruford College, 29 Arlingford Road, SW2 2SR, London, United Kingdom Keywords contemporary arts, British arts, new writing, theatre history, postwar British drama Aleks Sierz FRSA is author of In-Yer-Face Theatre: British Drama Today (Faber, 2001), The Theatre of Martin Crimp (Methuen, 2006), John Osborne's Look Back in Anger (Continuum, 2008) and Rewriting the Nation: British Theatre Today (Methuen, 2011). Currently coeditor of theatreVOICE website, he works as a journalist, broadcaster, and is theatre critic of Tribune. He is also Visiting Professor at Rose Bruford College, and teaches postwar British drama at the London branch of Boston University. › Blasted Ethics, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 111-112. Vagelis Siropoulos Goldsmiths, University of London and Ghent University Keywords superstardom, pop messianism, counterculture, the culture of narcissism, megamusical Vagelis Siropoulos received his BA, MA and Ph.D. from the School of English of Aristotle University, Greece. His Ph.D. thesis offers a historical culturally informed analysis of megamusical aesthetics. He is currently a visiting lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London, and Postdoctoral Research Fellow at Ghent University, Belgium. His interest in musicals extends beyond the theoretical domain. He owns his own production company in Greece that specializes in postmodern forms of musical theatre and spectacle. › Andrew Lloyd Webber and the culture of narcissism, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 273-291. › Megamusicals, spectacle and the postdramatic aesthetics of late capitalism, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 13-34. Julia Sloth-Nielsen University of the Western Cape, Faculty of Law, Modderdam Road, Bellville, Cape Town, 7535, South Africa Keywords juvenile offenders, music education, law, mentors, Africa Julia Sloth-Nielsen is Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of the Western Cape, South Africa specializing in children's rights, juvenile justice and criminal justice policy. She has authored numerous publications, most recently on the duties of the African child, on children's socio-economic rights and on child friendly laws and policies in Africa. She was part of the drafting team of the South African Children's Act 38 of 2005 and of the Child Justice Bill, in Parliament in 2008. She has worked in child law reform regionally in several countries, including Mozambique, Lesotho, Sudan, Kenya and Somaliland. › South Africa, the arts and youth in conflict with the law, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 69-88. Jackie Smart Kingston University, School of Performance and Screen Studies, Penrhyn Road, Kingston upon Thames, Surrey, KT1 2EE, United Kingdom Keywords devised theatre, contemporary arts, dramaturgy, drama Jackie is a principal lecturer in Drama at Kingston University and coauthor, with Alex Mermikides, of Devising in Process (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010). Devising, dramaturgy and directing are her key areas of interest and she has also published articles on the theatre companies Forced Entertainment and Optik, as well as a chapter on Random Dance in New Visions in Performance (Carver and Beardon (Eds), 2004). Her latest research project was a practice-based collaboration with her colleagues Alex Mermikides, Croatian Dramaturg, Marin Blazevic and students on the Kingston MAs in Playwriting and Devising, which was based around Paula Rego's Dog Women series of paintings. This is part of a longer-term project exploring roles and functions within devising processes. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 267-272. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 107-114. Elizabeth Smears Liverpool John Moores University, 2 Rodney Street, Liverpool, Merseyside, L1 2UA, United Kingdom Keywords somatic awareness, embodiment, professional development, reflective learning Dr. Elizabeth Smears is a senior lecturer in Education within the Centre for Postgraduate and Professional Development at Liverpool John Moores University. She is also an honorary lecturer within the School of Health Sciences at the University of Liverpool. The focus of her academic work and professional practice is in physicality somatics and wellbeing, creativity and inclusion. Lizzie has worked with many different communities and uses the arts to support engagement in learning. Lizzie has an MEd in the therapeutic and educational use of the arts, and a Ph.D. that explores gender and physicality. Lizzie is involved in research and evaluation projects with education organizations, community programmes and health promotion agencies that address inclusion. Her research interests include physicality, somatics and well being, inclusion, creativity and learning. She is involved in ESRC funded educational research that focuses on creativity in education. › Breaking old habits: professional development through an embodied approach to reflective practice, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 99-110. Rineke Smilde Prince Claus Conservatorie, Veemarkstaat 76, 9724 GA Gronningen, Netherlands Keywords biography, theatre, lifelong learning, music Rineke Smilde is Professor of Lifelong Learning in Music & the Arts at the Prince Claus Conservatoire in Groningen and the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague. She holds a Ph.D. in Social Sciences summa cum laude from the University in Goettingen in Germany, a MA in Musicology (twentieth century music) from Amsterdam University and she graduated as a performing musician with principal study in Flute at the Groningen Conservatoire. For many years Rineke had a career as a performing artist and as Professor of Flute at the Alkmaar Conservatory, and she taught Music History at the Royal Conservatoire in The Hague. From 1994 to 1998, she served as Director of the Department of Classical Music at the Prince Claus Conservatoire in Groningen and between 1998 and 2004 as Director of the Conservatoire. › Lifelong learners in music; research into musicians' biographical learning, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 243-252. › Lifelong and lifewide learning from a biographical perspective: transformation and transition when coping with performance anxiety, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 185-201. Phil Smith Keywords walking, mythogeography, public ritual, popular theatre, dramaturgy Phil is a visiting lecturer and postgraduate researcher at the University of Plymouth, and also teaches at the University of Exeter. Phil comes from a background in performance and music theatre, working as a writer and dramaturg with companies including TNT (Munich), St Petersburg State Comedy Theatre, Opera North and Perpetual Motion. He writes on walking, performance and mythogeography. › 'O, are you not being Phil?': notes towards a materialist aesthetics of neosymbolist performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.1, 40-53. › Street performance and public ritual in Exeter, 1830s to 1930s: crucial moments and theoretical sketches, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.2, 95-112. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 83-. › Theatrical-political possibilities in contemporary procession, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 15-31. Kathy Smith Keywords Beckett, body, contemporary arts, feminism, liminal, Munro, performance, psychoanalysis Kathy Smith is a senior lecturer in Theatre Studies. Her research interests include theories of identity, spectatorship and representation, with particular reference to psychoanalysis, feminism, contemporary theatre/performance practices, and the theatres of Samuel Beckett and Rona Munro. › The body in pain: Beckett, Orlan and the politics of performance, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 33-46. › Burning alive: Memory, disturbance and the theatre of Rona Munro, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 243-262. › Beyond the black box, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 185-194. › The things that scorch us: fantasies of origin, the transcultural spectator and the theatre of Rona Munro, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 253274. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 233-243. Matt Smith Matt currently leads the undergraduate Community Drama programme at the Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts. Matt is also the artistic Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts, Community Drama programme, Mount Street, Liverpool, L1 9HF, United Kingdom director for PickleHerring Theatre Company. Matt has been a freelance artist for sixteen years, working in diverse settings such as schools, prisons, hospitals, environmental agencies and working with the homeless. Matt’s work is always eclectic, working across disciplines such as drama, puppetry, masks, and music. Matt completed his MA in Contemporary Arts at Manchester Metropolitan University. Keywords puppetry, participation, environment › PickleHerring and Marlsite projects: an interdisciplinary approach to junk music-making, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 159-168. David S. Smith Western Michigan University, USA, 1903 West Michigan Avenue, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, United States of America Keywords schools, music, community, history David Smith has been actively involved in community music-making for most of his professional life. During doctoral studies, he developed an interest in older adults and music-making, particularly in the contexts of education, therapy and wellness. That naturally led to him to begin a multifaceted music programme at the Tallahassee Senior Center, with the choir and recorder ensemble frequently performing at community events. He has held faculty positions at the University of Georgia and Western Michigan University, where he is currently Professor of Music Education and Coordinator of Graduate Studies in the School of Music. › Community music in the United States: An overview of origins and evolution, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 343-353. Rob Smith University of Glamorgan, Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries, Adam Street, Cardiff, CF24 2FN, United Kingdom Rob Smith is a senior lecturer in Popular Music at the University of Glamorgan and was musical director of King Oedipus. He has written an article about the process of adapting this for performance. › Audience journeys through multiple stories: Adapting King Oedipus for performance, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 69-92. Keywords popular music, directing, King Oedipus Yuji Sone Macquarie University, Department of Media, Music, Communication, & Dr. Yuji Sone is a lecturer in the Department of Media, Music, and Cultural Studies at Macquarie University. He is a Sydney-based artist who has produced numerous media-based performances and installations. His academic research focuses on mediated performance Cultural Studies, Building Y3A, North Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia and performance of the body in conjunction with objects, space and technology, especially from cross-cultural perspectives, such as Japanese culture and performance. Dr. Sone has published in performance studies and cultural studies journals. Keywords theatre, comedy, competition, Japan, robotics › More than objects: Robot performance in Japan's Bacarobo Theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 341-353. Stella Sorby Hong Kong Baptist University, Kowloon Tong, Hong Kong, 852, China Keywords audience, music, adaptation, translation, musicals, song, interculturalism Stella Lanxing Sorby was formerly senior lecturer and member of the Centre for European and International Studies Research at the University of Portsmouth. She has been awarded a Hong Kong Government Ph.D. Fellowship, which she is taking at Hong Kong Baptist University. Her publications include ‘Translating News from English to Chinese – Complimentary and Derogatory Language Usage’ in Babel. › Translating western musicals into Chinese: Adapting to the reception, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 3.2, 185-199. Jane E. Southcott Monash University (Clayton Campus), Faculty of Education, Victoria 3800, Australia Keywords active aging, engagement, education, personal growth Dr. Jane Southcott is a senior lecturer in the Faculty of Education, Monash University. Her main research focus is the history of the music curriculum in Australia, America and Europe. She is a narrative historian and much of her research is biographical. Dr. Southcott also researches music and positive aging, cultural identity and performance anxiety. She oversees the Master of Education, teaches in postgraduate and pre-service programmes and supervises many postgraduate research students. Dr. Southcott is National President of the Australian and New Zealand Association for Research in Music Education and a member of the editorial boards of international and national refereed journals. › ‘And as I go, I love to sing’: the Happy Wanderers, music and positive aging, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 143-156. John Staniunas University of Kansas, Department of John Staniunas is the Chair of the Department of Theatre and Film at the University of Kansas and an Associate Professor of Directing, Acting, Movement and Musical Theatre. He is a professional director Theatre, 1530 Naismith Drive Room 356, Lawrence, Kansas, 66045, United States of America and choreographer with a long list of credits from regional and university theatres. He has staged over 100 musicals and plays from original works to classics. Credits include directing/choreography at Milwaukee Repertory Theatre and Madison Repertory Theatre in Wisconsin, The Willows Theatre and the Sacramento Theatre Company and Contra Costa Music Theatre in California, The Hippodrome State Theatre in Florida and the Gaslight Theatre in Tucson, AZ. John is also a professional actor and a twenty year member of A.E.A., the Actor’s Equity Association. Keywords haunted stage, song, Meredith Willson, music, psychology. Robert Preston › Haunted characters: Harold and Marian: directing The Music Man, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 43-51. Adam Stansbie Leeds Metropolitan University, Room C126, Caedmon Hall, Headingley Campus, Innovation North, LS6 3QS, United Kingdom Keywords plasticity, phenomenology, ontology, performance, computer music Adam Stansbie is a sound artist involved in the creation and performance of electro-acoustic music. He has presented works at festivals and concerts throughout Europe, Asia, North and South America and Australasia and has won awards at the Bourges International Competition, France (2006), the International Acousmatic Competition ‘Metamorphosis’, Belgium (2006) and, most recently, first prize in the Destellos Competition, Argentina (2010). Adam has worked in various prestigious European studios (including the IMEB, France (2007, 2008); Musique et Recherché, Belgium (2009), VICC, Sweden (2010) and USSS, UK (2010)), has taught at several HE institutions and is currently senior lecturer in Music, Sound and Performance at Leeds Metropolitan University. › Sounds, agents, works and listeners; A model of computer music performance, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 17-30. Tim Stephenson University of Leeds, School of Performance and Cultural Industries, Woodhouse Lane, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Tim Stephenson trained as a musician before moving into lecturing and management in various universities. He is currently working in the areas of arts management, cultural analysis and research methodologies. Primary research interests are in the socio-political analysis of the performing arts: the interface between structural and cultural analytical models. Keywords Varèse, Poème, électronique, authenticity, reproduction, liveness, mediatization › Poème électronique by Edgard Varèse: Authenticity, reproduction and mediatization, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.1, 55-68. Jenn Stephenson Queen's University, Drama Department, Kingston, Ontario, K7L 3N6, Canada Jenn Stephenson is an Assistant Professor of Drama at Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario. Recent publications include articles in Theatre Journal and Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. She is at work on a book tentatively titled Metatheatricality and Shakespeare: The Creation and Collapse of Fictional Worlds. Keywords metatheatre, phenomenology, audience, celebrity, theatre › Singular impressions: Meta-theatre on Renaissance celebrities and corpses, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 137-154. Jessica Sternfeld Keywords 1950s, masculinity, postwar suburbs, baseball, gender studies Jessica Sternfeld (Ph.D., Princeton) is a musicologist with specialties in American musical theatre, popular genres, and opera. Her book The Megamusical examines the cultural and musical workings of the blockbuster hits of the 1980s. She has published articles and chapters on many aspects of musical theatre on stage, screen, and television. She teaches at Chapman University. › Damn Yankees and the 1950s man: you gotta have (loyalty, an escape clause, and) heart, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 77-83. › Musical theatre and the almighty dollar: What a tangled web they weave, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 3-12. Don Stewart Griffith University, School of Public Health, Logan campus, Meadowbrook, QLD 4131, Australia Keywords choral singing, psychological, well-being, crossnational survey, resilience Donald Stewart is Professor of Health Promotion, School of Public Health, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. His research expertise lies with health promotion, mental health, health and ageing and public health services. He teaches on a wide range or subjects including: health promotion, health and ageing, health research methodology, music (singing and dance), management culture and change and the prevention of HIV/AIDS using multi-strategy interventions. › Choral singing and psychological wellbeing: Quantitative and qualitative findings from English choirs in a cross-national survey, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 19-34. Theodore Stickley University of Nottingham, School of Nursing, Midwifery & Physiotherapy, Theodore Stickley is Associate Professor in the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences at the University of Nottingham. He is also a Director of City Arts, Nottingham. Duncan Macmillan House, Porchester Road, Nottingham, NG3 6AA, United Kingdom › Reviews, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 341-344. › A philosophy for community-based, participatory arts practice: A narrative inquiry, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 73-83. Keywords community art, medicine, health sciences Pamyla A. Stiehl University of Colorado at Boulder, Theatre and Dance, 9980 Phillips Road, Lafayette, CO, 80026, United States of America Keywords Dafora, dance, musical theatre, African diaspora, choreography, Gesamtkunstwerk Pamyla obtained her Ph.D. in Theatre from University of Colorado/Boulder where her dissertation titled ‘The Dansical’ garnered the George K. Reynolds Fellowship. She currently serves as Adjunct Faculty for CU/Boulder and University of Denver, teaching both lecture and performance classes in musical theatre. She has published articles in Journal of American Theatre and Drama, Texas Theatre Journal, Journal of Religion and Theatre, and Quarto, as well as performance reviews in Theatre Journal. She is currently working with a co-author on the publication of a musical theatre textbook for higher education. A long-time member of Actors Equity, Pamyla has performed award-winning roles in Seattle, Toronto, and Denver regional theatres, as well as having directed and choreographed over twenty musical productions. › The Curious Case of Kykunkor: a ‘dansical’/musical exploration and reclamation of Asadata Dafora's Kykunkor, or the Witch Woman (1934), Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 143-156. Axel Stockburger Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Institute of Visual Arts, Lehargasse 8, Vienna, A-1060, Austria Keywords games, spatiality, media studies, interactive art Axel Stockburger is an artist and theorist who lives and works in London and Vienna. He studied at the University of Applied Arts in Vienna with Peter Weibel and holds a Ph.D. from the University of the Arts, London. His films and installations are shown internationally. Among other projects he has initiated the independent art television channel TIV in Vienna in 1998 and collaborated on international projects with the London based media art group D-Fuse (2000–04). At present he works as scientific staff member at the Department for Visual Arts and Digital Media/Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna. › Playing the third place: Spatial modalities in contemporary game environments, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 223-236. Jeremy Strong Writtle College, Chelmsford, Essex, CM1 3RR, United Kingdom Keywords Jane Austen, adaptation, genre, romantic comedy, class, intertextuality Dr. Jeremy Strong is Head of Higher Education at Writtle College, Essex. He has published on novel-to-film adaptation in Literature/Film Quarterly and Adaptation and is editor, with Drs. Garin Dowd and Lesley Stevenson, of Genre Matters: Essays in Theoryand Criticism (Intellect: 2006). Currently editing Educated Tastes: Food, Drink, and Connoisseur Culture for the University of Nebraska Press, he is also Secretary of the Association of Literature on Screen Studies. › Sweetening Jane: Equivalence through Genre, and the Problem of Class in Austen Adaptations, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 205219. Robyn Stuart al’Kamie Intermedia Theater, c/o Blue Cottage, Lower Froyle, Alton, Hampshire, GU34 4LL., United Kingdom Keywords digital scenography, dance, virtual environment, complexity theory, emergence Robyn Stuart is a performance artist who has a strong scientific background having a Ph.D. and worked as a research fellow in the Department of Ecosystem Management at the University of New England, Australia. She has just completed an MA in Collaborative Arts from the University College Chichester, where she investigated compositional techniques for live dance in ‘moving’ digital scenography. She has worked as an independent dance artist/choreographer in Sydney, Australia and the United Kingdom since 1993, and formed al’Ka-mie together with Brian Curson in 2000 in order to perform, choreograph, and develop live theatre, which incorporates digital scenography. › Exploring Living Room: The dancing body and live immersion in digital scenography, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 2.3, 259-274. Leila Ryland Swain Keywords Hammons family of West Virginia, informal transmission, poetry Leila Ryland Swain is a psychotherapist who has maintained a private practice in Washington, DC, for over twenty years. She is theoretically based in Jungian Analytical Psychology. She is also a musician who has attended the Allegheny Echoes programme for several summers, studying guitar, mandolin and bass. › Passing on a culture: West Virginia traditional musical heritage and the Allegheny Echoes programme, International Journal of Community Music, 3.2, 255-276. Steve Swayne Dartmouth College, Department of Music, HB 6187, 6187 Hopkins Center, Hanover, NH, 3755, United States of America Keywords Stephen Sondheim, A Little Night Music, Waltz, Waltz musical Steve Swayne is an associate professor of music at Dartmouth College in Hanover, NH. He has published widely on the musical playwright Stephen Sondheim, including the book, How Sondheim Found His Sound (2005). His next major project is a biography on American composer William Schuman. › Remembering and re-membering: Sondheim, the waltz, and A Little Night Music, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 259-274. Lim Swee Hong Baylor University, School of Music, One Bear Place #97408, Waco, Texas, 76798, United States of America Lim Swee Hong is a lecturer in Worship, Liturgy and Music at Trinity Theological College, and Adjunct Professor for Worship at Asbury Theological Seminary. At present, he chairs the Worship and Liturgy committee of the World Methodist Council. › Ritual community and identity formation: A case study of the Thai Covenant Church in Thailand, International Journal of Community Music, 2.1, 79-83. Keywords Asia, ritual, creativity, religion, identity, contextualization, choir, Christianity, Methodist Neal Swettenham Loughborough University, Department of English and Drama, Loughborough, Leicestershire, LE11 3TU, United Kingdom Keywords Richard Foreman, narrative, performance, contemporary Shakespeare, radical texts for performance Neal Swettenham lectures in Drama at Loughborough University. His primary research interests are in the areas of narrative in performance, theatre and cognition, contemporary Shakespeare, radical texts for performance, and the theatre of Richard Foreman. Neal curates the Richard Foreman Research Archive, which is housed at Loughborough. › An Opportunity to get hit by a Car: Richard Foreman at Work, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.1, 19-29. Elizabeth Swift University of Worcester, Institute of Humanities & Creative Arts, Henwick Grove, Worcester, WR2 6AJ, United Kingdom Keywords interactivity, narrative, Elizabeth Swift is a director of the performance group ‘Void’, which has a twenty-year history of creating installation and performance projects engaging with digital media. Her work with Void, which is made in collaboration with Peter Ireland and other artists, has been presented throughout the United Kingdom and in Europe and the United States. A senior lecturer at Worcester University, Elizabeth's research areas include hypertext and narrative structures in contemporary performance, intermedial performance practice, site- theatre, performance, virtual worlds specific performance, and the relationship between digital media and contemporary performance practice. She is a researcher for the Centre for Intermedia at Exeter University. › Losing the plot an exploration of narrative collaboration and control in Second Life, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.2, 171-192. Dominic Symonds University of Portsmouth, School of Creative Arts, Film & Media, Wiltshire Building, Hampshire Terrace, Portsmouth, Hampshire, PO1 2ED, United Kingdom Keywords music theatre, theatre research, musical stage Dominic Symonds holds a Ph.D. from London University. His research focuses on post-structuralist approaches to the musical stage. He is editor of Studies in Musical Theatre (Intellect) alongside colleague George Burrows, and was founding organizer of the international conference, 'Song, Stage and Screen', which has recently enjoyed its fourth annual meeting in Washington DC. He is also co-convenor of the music theatre working group of the International Federation for Theatre Research. He co-edited Vol. 19.1 of Contemporary Theatre Review (Jan 2009), and is co-editor of the proposed publication Music theatre - performance, experience and context (Rodopi). › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 121-122. › The corporeality of musical expression:'the grain of the voice' and the actormusician, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.2, 167-182. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 3-6. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 225-226. › Book Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.3, 309-324. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.2, 125-126. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 221-222. › The Story of Oh: the aesthetics and rhetoric of a common vowel sound, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 245-259. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 141-142. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 233-234. › Reviews, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 311-319. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 139-140. › Editorial, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 245-246. › EDITORIAL, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.2, 131-132. Alex Symons Alex Symons is studying for his Ph.D. at the University of Nottingham. University of Nottingham, American and Canadian Studies, The Institute of Film and Television Studies, University Park, Nottingham, NG7 2RD, United Kingdom His thesis examines comedy and adaptation in popular entertainment, focusing on the multimedia career of Mel Brooks. He also works as editor of film reviews for Scope: An Online Journal of Film and TV Studies. Keywords The Producers, comedy, adaptation, Broadway, taste › Mass-Market Comedy: How Mel Brooks Adapted The Producers for Broadway, and Made a Billion Dollars 2001– 2007, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.2, 133-145. Kurt Taroff Queen’s University Belfast, Department of Drama, University Road, Belfast, BT7 1NN, United Kingdom Keywords monodrama, music, avantgarde Kurt Taroff is a Lecturer in Drama at the Queen’s University of Belfast. He received his Ph.D. in 2005 from the City University of New York Graduate Centre. His primary work focuses on the history and analysis of the form of monodrama from its birth in music in the eighteenth century, to its development in theory and practice as an avant-garde dramatic form in the twentieth century. Kurt is also the convenor of the Translation, Adaptation, and Dramaturgy working group of the International Federation for Theatre Research. His work has appeared in Modern Mask, The Journal of the Pirandello Society of America and Forum Modernes Theater. › ‘No dream is ever just a dream’: Stanley Kubrick’s Eyes Wide Shut as monofilm, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 145-157. Millie Taylor University of Winchester, Department of Performing Arts Keywords musical theatre, pantomime, entertainment, popular performance Millie Taylor spent almost twenty years as a professional musical director and has toured Britain and Europe with a variety of musicals including West Side Story, Rocky Horror Show, Little Shop of Horrors and Sweeney Todd. She is now Reader in Performing Arts at the University of Winchester. Recent publications include British Pantomime Performance (Intellect 2007) and Singing for Musicals: A Practical Guide (Crowood Press 2008). She is currently working on a book on musical theatre, Musical Theatre, Realism and Entertainment to be published by Ashgate Press in their series 'Interdisciplinary Studies in Opera'. › ‘Don’t dream it, be it’: exploring signification, empathy and mimesis in relation to The Rocky Horror Show, Studies in Musical Theatre, 1.1, 57-72. › Drawing attention to the significant:exploring the functions of music in The Overcoat (1998)1, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.3, 261-281. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 23.2, 117-124. › Exploring the grain: The sound of the voice in Bruce Nauman's Raw Materials, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 289-296. Floyd Scott Taylor Keywords language, linguistics, disability, neuroscience A Communications Theorist, F. Scott Taylor resides in Toronto, Canada. In late 2005, Taylor collaborated on a digital lecture performance, NEWS, at Gasthuis Theater, Amsterdam. He is currently President and Chair of Subtle Technologies Arts Projects. He has worked as a Media Communications Consultant, lecturer, Media Arts critic and Media Artist. He received his Ph.D. and MA from the Department of English, University of Toronto. His thesis was tited Automatic Stein [Gertrude]: The Literature of Dissociation. › Metaphors and mirrors in digital performance: Dress rehearsal for social autism, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 59-82. Lib Taylor University of Reading, Whiteknights, PO Box 217, Berkshire, RG6 6AH, United Kingdom Keywords postmodernism, fragmentation, defamiliarization, displacement, dance, movement Lib Taylor is Professor of Theatre and Performance in the Department of Film, Theatre & Television at the University of Reading. She has published on the body in performance, women's theatre and contemporary British theatre. She is a director and devisor of theatre research performances that have recently included performances of Marguerite Duras's later plays and a piece based on the theatre writings of Gertrude Stein. She was a co-investigator on the AHRC-funded Acting with Facts project. › The ‘Unhomely’ stage, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 205-220. › The experience of immediacy: Emotion and enlistment in fact-based theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.2, 223-237. Timothy D. Taylor University of California, Departments of Ethnomusicology and Musicology at the University of California, Departments of Ethnomusicology and Musicology, University of California, P.O. Box 951657, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1657, USA Timothy D. Taylor is a Professor in the Departments of Ethnomusicology and Musicology at the University of California, Los Angeles. In addition to numerous articles on various musics, he is the author of Global Pop: World Music, World Markets (Routledge 1997), Strange Sounds: Music, Technology and Culture (Routledge 2001), and Beyond Exoticism: Western Music and the World (Duke University Press 2007). Two new books appeared in the spring of 2012: Music, Sound, and Technology in America: A Documentary History of Early Phonograph, Cinema, and Radio, co-edited with Mark Katz and Tony Keywords Grajeda, published by Duke University Press; and The Sounds of Capitalism: Advertising, Music, and the Conquest of Culture, published by the University of Chicago Press. He is currently writing a book on music and capitalism for the Big Ideas in Music series for the University of Chicago Press. › The seductions of technology, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 227-232. Mark Taylor-Batty University of Leeds, School of English, The Workshop Theatre, Leeds, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords Not I, Billie Whitelaw, Beckett, acting, directing, performance Mark Taylor-Batty is a senior lecturer in Theatre Studies at the Workshop Theatre, School of English, University of Leeds. He is an officer of the international Pinter Society and author of two books on Harold Pinter's writings. He assisted that author in the construction of his official website, haroldpinter.org, and authored two sections of that site. He has published in the field of Twentieth-Century French and British Theatre and is currently working on a monograph on Antonin Artaud and research into modes of digital publication of critical works. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 3-4. › ‘We’re not beginning to... to... mean something?’: teaching Beckett’s theatricality in a university drama department, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.1, 5-14. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 233-243. › Artist and citizen: 50 Years of performing Pinter, at the workshop theatre, Leeds, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 249-256. Jesús Tejada Jesús Tejada is a faculty member at the University of Valencia where he is writing a thesis on the topic of the effects of materials and strategies in the learning of a music score editor by novice users. Keywords sound-based rhythm, didactic design › Tactus: Didactic designand implementation ofa pedagogically soundbasedrhythm-training computerprogram, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.2-3, 155-165. Aaron C. Thomas › Engaging an icon: Caroline, or Change and the politics of representation, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 199-210. Keywords mammy, Jeanine Tesori, Tony Kushner, Caroline, stereotypes Sarah Thomas University of Wales Aberystwyth, Wales, United Kingdom Keywords radio broadcasting in the United States, old time radio, horror, mystery, Hollywood Sarah Thomas is a Lecturer in Film Studies at Aberystwyth University. Her current and ongoing research interests include stardom, supporting actors and screen performance, film history and the historical film, classical Hollywood cinema, contemporary Hollywood cinema, transnational cinema and émigré performers, cinema during the 1940s and the Second World War, American radio (1930-1950). › REVIEWS, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 201-215. Michael Thompson University of Durham, School of Modern Languages & Cultures, Durham, DH1 3JT, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, Spain, censorship, translation Dr. Michael Thompson is a senior lecturer in Hispanic Studies at the University of Durham. He is co-author of A New History of Spanish Writing, 1939 to the 1990s (OUP 2000), and has published articles and essays on various aspects of modern Spanish theatre, including censorship and the work of García Lorca, Alberti, Buero Vallejo, Rodríguez Méndez, Martín Recuerda, Ruibal and Pedrero. In 2007 Intellect published his book Performing Spanishness: History, Cultural Identity and Censorship in the Theatre of José María Rodríguez Méndez. Between 2008 and 2011 he led an AHRC-funded research project on Theatre Censorship in Spain, 1931-1985. He has also published translations of plays by Buero Vallejo and Pedrero, and is co-author of the revised edition of the widely used textbook Thinking Spanish Translation (Routledge 2009). › Practice as Research, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.3, 159-180. Peter Thomson University of Exeter, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, Shakespeare, Brecht Having qualified as a Russian interpreter during his national service, Peter Thomson read English at Jesus College, Cambridge (1958-61), was a Canada Council scholar at the University of Toronto (1961-2), a lecturer in Drama at the University of Manchester (1964-71) and at University College, Swansea (1971-4). Thomson was Professor of Drama at the University of Exeter since 1974, and having recently retired, has become Emeritus Professor of Drama. › The Elizabethan Actor: a matter of temperament, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.1, 4-13. › Stop Press, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 20.2, 114-. › Locating the Lost Playhouses of Shakespeare's London, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.2, 118-120. › Book Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.3, 188-. › Dismantling the Gesamtkunstwerk: Weill, Neher and Brecht in Collaboration, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.1, 30-39. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 24.1, 63-. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 26.3, 297-. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.2, 201-. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 3-4. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.1, 83-. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.2, 185-194. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 267-272. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 3-3. › ‘He’s for a jig or a tale of bawdry—’: notes on the English dramatic jig, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 67-83. › Saluting Pickering & Chatto: a review article, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 199-211. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 213-222. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 339-346. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.2, 233-243. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 361-371. › Reviews, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 123-130. › What's in a name? Cricket in No Man's Land, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 5-15. › REVIEWS, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 351-354. Linda J. Thomson University College London, Room G2, UCL Wolfson House, 4 Stephenson Way, London, NW1 2HE, United Kingdom Linda Thomson is Research Associate on the ‘Heritage in Hospitals’ programme at University College London, and a psychologist and lecturer specializing in research methods, biopsychology, memory and learning. Her research interests include the roles of vision and touch in enhancing health and well-being. Keywords vision, health, well-being, biopsychology, memory › Evaluating the therapeutic effects of museum object handling with hospital patients: A review and initial trial of well-being measures, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 37-56. Barbara Thornbury Temple University, Dept. of Critical Languages, Anderson Hall 022-38, Philadelphia, PA 19122, United States of America Keywords Japanese literature and film, Tokyo woman, America's Japan Barbara Thornbury is an associate professor of Japanese studies in the Dept. of Critical Languages at Temple University (Philadelphia, PA, US). She teaches courses on Japanese literature and film. Her recent published work includes ‘Re-imagining Ozu: Hou Hsiao-Hsien’s Café Lumière and the Contemporary Tokyo Woman’ (Proceedings of the Assn. for Japanese Literary Studies, 11: Summer 2010). She is currently working on a book titled America’s Japan and Japan’s Performing Arts: Image, Myth, Cultural Mobility and Exchange. › History, adaptation, Japan: Haruki Murakami’s ‘Tony Takitani’ and Jun Ichikawa’s Tony Takitani, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 159-171. Ashley Thorpe University of Reading, Department of Film, Theatre and Television, Whiteknights, Reading, Berkshire, RG6 6AH, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, disability, Asian theatre, British Sign Language (BSL), Chinese theatre Ashley Thorpe is Lecturer in Theatre in the Department of Film, Theatre and Television at the University of Reading, where he teaches theoretical and practical approaches to Theatre, including modules on traditional and contemporary Chinese performance. He published the monograph The Role of the Clown (Chou) in Traditional Chinese Drama in 2007, and has also published articles in Theatre Research International, Contemporary Theatre Review, and the Asian Theatre Journal. He is a co-founding member of the Asian Performing Arts Forum, an organization that arranges a series of public talks on Asian performance forms in the United Kingdom. He is currently researching British Chinese theatre and culture, and performs regularly with the London Jing Kun Opera Association. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 117-119. › The long and the short of it: negotiating the right space for Asian theatre in the university drama curriculum, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.2, 133-147. › Style, experimentation and Jingju (Beijing Opera) as a decentred multiplicity, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 275-291. Julie Tiernan University of Limerick, Irish World Academy of Music and Dance,, Certificate in Music and Dance/The Nomad Project, Limerick, Ireland Keywords youth, art, Ireland, community music As community musician she has worked in Australia, United States, United Kingdom and Ireland in a range of community settings. This includes work with ethnic minorities, victims of violence, young mothers, disabled, prisoners and young offenders. She has extensive experience in working with the Traveller community and young offenders. Much of Julie’s work in Ireland has been closely linked to the Irish World Academy of Music and Dance at University of Limerick and has been at the forefront of several long-term community music projects with Nomad. Julie also lectures on the MA course in Community Music and the BA course in Irish Music and Dance. Julie is also Course Director for an Access-based Certificate in Music and Dance. This course offers graduates the opportunity of further study on a BA course. As a committed educator and community activist she believes in ‘bridging the gap’ between traditional and non-traditional learning. › Céim ar Chéim, Step by Step – Community music programme in an Irish probation centre: A personal reflection, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 133-142. Liz Tomlin University of Birmingham, Department of Drama and Theatre Arts, Edgbaston, Birmingham, B15 2TT, United Kingdom Keywords monographs, contemporary performance, performance theory Liz Tomlin is a lecturer at the University of Birmingham, where she is currently working on a monograph on contemporary performance and theory for publication with Manchester University Press in 2012. She was associate director of Point Blank Theatre from 1999–09 and has edited Point Blank (Intellect, 2007), a selection of Point Blank Theatre’s performance texts and critical essays on the company’s work. Previous professional productions haveincluded Roses & Morphine (2005), Operation Wonderland (2004) and Nothing to Declare (2002) and she is currently working on The Pool Game in collaboration with artistic collective Geiger Counter. › A ‘Political Suspension of theEthical’: To Be Straight WithYou (2007) and An Eveningwith Psychosis (2009), Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 167-180. Naphtaly Shem Tov Open University of Israel, Literature, Arts and Linguistics Department, 1 University Road, POB 808, Raanana, 43537, Israel Naphtaly Shem Tov teaches in the Literature, Arts and Linguistics Department of the Open University of Israel. His research interests include community theatre, theatre festivals, educational theatre, ethnicity and cultural identity. › Celebration and confrontation: Akko Festival of Israeli Alternative Theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.1, 93-105. Keywords theatre, festivals, Israeli theatre, art, community, race, politics Katalin Trencsényi Katalin Trencsényi is a London-based dramaturg. She studied at the London, United Kingdom Janus Pannonius University, Pécs, the Academy of Drama and Film, Budapest, and the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, London. As a freelance dramaturg she has worked for the National Theatre (Channels project), read scripts for the Royal Court Theatre, and worked as a production dramaturg or dance dramaturg for many other independent companies. In addition to writing theatre reviews, she has one book on theatre and two plays published. Currently she is pursuing a Ph.D. in dramaturgy. Katalin is President of the Dramaturgs’ Network (UK). Keywords music, drama, theatre reviews, dramaturgy › Labours of love: Interview with Penny Black on translation for the stage by Katalin Trencsényi, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 189200. Melissa Trimingham The University of Kent, Department of Drama, School of Arts, Jarman Building, Canterbury, CT2 7UG, United Kingdom Keywords therapeutic, object, embodiment, puppet, autism Melissa Trimingham worked extensively in UK community theatre including many applied theatre projects with Horse and Bamboo Theatre Company, Lancashire. She is a lecturer in Drama at the University of Kent. She has previously published on Oskar Schlemmer, the Bauhaus theatre and the methodology of practical research. She has just completed a book on the theatre of the Bauhaus for Routledge (2011). She is co-leader with Dr. Nicola Shaughnessy of the Centre for Cognition, Kinesthetics and Performance at the University of Kent, and engaged with Dr. Shaughnessy on joint practical research into media interventions with autistic children. › A Methodology for Practice as Research, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.1, 54-66. › Objects in transition: The puppet and the autistic child, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 251-265. Darren Tunstall University of Central Lancashire, ME127 Media Factory, Preston, Lancashire, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Keywords Shakespeare, non-verbal communication, Lecoq, modernism, gesture Darren Tunstall read English Literature at St Catharine’s College, Cambridge University, and trained as an actor at Bristol Old Vic Theatre School and, later, with Philippe Gaulier, before working for twenty years as a professional actor, writer and director. He taught at Wimbledon School of Art, Central School of Speech and Drama and Arts Educational Schools (London) before becoming a lecturer in BA (Hons) Acting at the University of Central Lancashire. His research interests are Shakespeare, gesture and the uses of motion capture in human movement analysis. He has written a chapter for the Routledge Companion to Actors' Shakespeare edited by Professor John Russell Brown, published in 2011, and is preparing material for his first book, Shakespeare in Practice: Gesture to be published in 2013 by Palgrave Macmillan. › The Aesthetic Uncanny: staging Dorian Gray, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 153-165. Cathy Turner University of Winchester, Performing Arts, West Hill, Winchester, SO22 4NR, United Kingdom Keywords performance, theatre, dialogue, playwriting, dramaturgy Cathy Turner is a Reader in Performing Arts at the University of Winchester and researches within the Centre for Research into Expanded Dramaturgies. She is director of ‘Writing Space’, a research project investigating the development of new writing and is joint author, with Synne Behrndt, of Dramaturgy and Performance (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008). She is a core member of Wrights & Sites, a group of artists whose work is concerned with our relationship to place and space. › Editorial Introduction, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 5-10. › Small Planet, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 19-24. › Remembering Writing Space: An interview with student participants, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 67-72. › Writing for the contemporary theatre: towards a radically inclusive dramaturgy, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 75-90. Helen Turner York St John University, Lord Mayors Walk, York, North Yorkshire, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords cross-art form, community groups, mental health, public art Helen Turner is a senior lecturer in Community Art and Fine Art at York St John University. Helen is a Visual Artist working across Community Art and Public Art. She has worked on a variety of projects ranging from; schools, mental health service users, community groups, disadvantaged youth, care leavers and in healthcare. She has a particular interest in collaborative and cross-art form work and project management. She also delivers training courses for visual artists aspiring to apply their practice. › Forgetting the machine: Patients experiences of engaging in artwork while on renal dialysis, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 2.1, 57-72. Victor I. Ukaegbu The University of Northampton, School of The Arts, St George’s Avenue, Northampton, NN2 6JD, Dr. Victor I. Ukaegbu is a senior lecturer and course leader for Drama at The University of Northampton. He has written on African and intercultural theatres, postcolonial performances, gender, black British theatre, applied theatre, including a book; The Use of Masks in Igbo Theatre in Nigeria: the Aesthetic Flexibility of Performance Traditions. United Kingdom He is Associate Editor of African Performance Review and a member of the Editorial Board of World Scenography (Africa/Middle East). Keywords performance, interaction, medicine sales, advertising, shamanism, sales-performers › Performative encounters: Performance intervention in marketing health products in Nigeria, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 35-51. Jeffrey Ullom Case Western Reserve University, Department of Theatre, 10900 Euclid Avenue, Cleveland, 44106, United States of America Jeffrey Ullom teaches theatre history and dramaturgy at Case Western Reserve University. His publications include his book The Humana Festival: A History of New Plays at Actors Theatre of Louisville and articles in Theatre Studies, Theatre Topics and the Journal of American Drama and Theatre. He is currently at work on Pop Goes the Musical!, an exploration of current trends in Broadway musicals. Keywords Elton John, The Capeman, David Henry Hwang, jukebox musicals, Broadway › There is an I in artist: dysfunctional collaborations and the doomed Pop Musicals Come (1994) and The Capeman (1998), Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.2, 211-225. Carole-Anne Upton University of Ulster, School of Creative Arts, Northland Road, Derry, Co. Londonderry, BT48 7JL, United Kingdom Keywords theatre, contemporary arts, ethics, translation, documentary, Northern Ireland, francophone theatre Carole-Anne Upton is professor of drama in the School of Creative Arts at the University of Ulster, where her main research interests are in the areas of contemporary theatre practice, particularly in Northern Ireland, theatre and social justice, translation for performance and directing. She has recently written several pieces on documentary theatre in Northern Ireland and a chapter on the translator as metteur en scène in Staging and Performing Translation: Text and Theatre Practice edited by Roger Baines, Cristina Marinetti and Manuela Perteghella (2010). She has previously published on Irish drama, and postcolonial anglophone and francophone theatre in Africa and the Caribbean. She is currently principal editor of Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre and Performance. She published Moving Target: Theatre Translation and Cultural Translation in 2000 with St. Jerome Press. › Real people as actors Actors as real people, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.2, 209-222. › Editorial, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 3-4. › EDITORIAL, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.2, 131-133. Bryan M. Vandevender Univeristy of Missouri, 3601 West Broadway Keywords Spring Awakening, sex, rock music, Lehman Engel, teenage sexuality Bryan M. Vandevender holds a MA in Performance Studies from New York University and is currently a doctoral student at the University of Missouri. His research interests include American musical theatre history, the notion of revival, the role of the theatre critic and the ethics of theatre criticism. › A substitute for love: the performance of sex in Spring Awakening, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 293-302. Ross Varney CeMAP at Coventry University, Coventry School of Art and Design, ICE building, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Ross Varney is Research/Production Assistant for the AHRC-funded Siobhan Davies Archive project (SDA) based at Coventry University’s Centre for Media Arts and Performance (CeMAP). His interest and expertise lies primarily in video production/post production and digital media and includes research around distributed media networks and digital archiving in the performing arts context. Keywords dance, digital media, archiving, corporeality, collaboration, interactivity › Born digital; dance in the digital age, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 51-63. Kari Veblen University of Western Ontario, The Don Wright Faculty of Music, Talbot College, Rm 210, 1151 Richmond Street, London, Ontario, N6A 3K7, Canada Keywords music, cross-cultural studies, typologies, community music, Musical Futures project Kari K. Veblen is Associate Professor of Music Education at the Don Wright Faculty of Music, University of Western Ontario, Canada. She teaches elementary general music methods, foundations of music education, multicultural music education and graduate research courses. She has taught music education at both elementary and college levels in Wisconsin. She also served as a research associate at the Irish World Music Centre (University of Limerick), a visiting scholar at the Center for Research in Music Education (University of Toronto) and as a curriculum consultant to orchestras, schools and community groups. Her interests bridge music, education, ethnomusicology and the arts. She is currently investigating community music networks, structures and individuals worldwide. Research and lectures have taken her to Europe, Scandinavia, Africa, Asia, New Zealand and the Americas. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 3-4. › The many ways of community music, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 5-22. › New initiatives in community music and music education: The UK Musical Futures project, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 127-130. › Editorial, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 139-141. › New Initiatives, International Journal of Community Music, 1.2, 287-291. › The facilitraining rainbow: an interview with Phil Mullen, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 263-265. › The medium is the message: cyberspace, community, and music learning in the Irish traditional music virtual community, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 99-111. Paul Vickers University of Northumbria, School of Informatics, Pandon Building, Camden Street, Newcastle-uponTyne, NE2 1XE, United Kingdom Keywords learning technology, studio practice, music, problem solving, contingent learning Paul Vickers holds a BSc degree in Computer Studies from Liverpool Polytechnic and a Ph.D. in Human-Computer Interaction from Loughborough University. He is currently Reader in Human-Computer Interaction and head of the Creative Media Technologies group in Northumbria University's School of Computing, Engineering, and Information Sciences in the United Kingdom where he has worked since 2001. He currently teaches computer programming, digital audio, sound design, and research methods to undergraduate and postgraduate students as well as supervising Ph.D. students. Between 1989 and 2001 Vickers taught at Liverpool John Moores University, and before that worked in a software development team at Digital Equipment Co. Ltd. Paul Vickers is a UK Chartered Engineer and a member of the Institution of Engineering and Technology and is also a Fellow of the UK's Higher Education Academy. › Problem solving with learning technology in the music studio, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.1, 57-68. Anna Vidali Keywords dance, improvisation, body, somatics, Greece Anna Vidali is an associate professor in the Department of Early Childhood Education of the University of Thessaly. She has a degree in Education from the University of Thessaloniki; a MA in Sociology of Education from the Institute of Education, University of London; a MA in Psychoanalytic Studies from Brunel University, London; and a Ph.D. from Goldsmith’s College, University of London. She is the author of five books and numerous articles. Her work includes a book on the Greek Civil War (1999) based on women’s narratives. She has also published books on Education and Modernity (2000), Early Childhood Education (2009), Freud and the Question of Femininity (2008) and edited a book on Fantasy and Narrative (2001). › Towards an innovative model of teaching Greek traditional dances, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 155-168. Adriane Vieira Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul, Av. Paulo Gama, 110, Bairro Farroupilha, Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil Keywords health, Foucault, Feldenkrais Method, dance Adriane Vieira, Ph.D. in Human movement science is Professor at the Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul and is invited teacher at Universidade do Vale dos Sinos. She works in Porto Alegre, Brazil. Adriane is physiotherapist and known as an expert in back school and somatic education. She is part of the Riograndense society of psychosomatics medicine. She is member of the research group Body posture and movement quality at Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul. › The experience of discourses in dance and somatics, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 47-64. Nicolas Villar Computer-Mediated Living Microsoft Research, 7 J J Thomson Ave, Cambridge, CB3 0FB, United Kingdom Keywords playful arenas, hyperphysical interfaces, sensing, tangibles, club culture Nicolas Villar is a researcher in the Sensors and Devices Group, part of the Computer Mediated Living Group of Microsoft Research in Cambridge, UK. He is particularly interested in the use of embedded systems - programmable microcontrollers, wireless communication devices, sensors and actuators - as building blocks in the design of physical interactive objects and user interface devices that are engaging, useful and usable. Previously, Villar was a Research Associate and part-time Ph.D. student in the Embedded Interactive Systems Research Group at Lancaster University. › New shapes on the dance floor: influencing ambient sound and vision with computationally augmented poi, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 1.1, 67-. Eckart Voigts-Virchow Siegen Universitaet, Anglistik I/Literaturwissenschaft, AdolfReichwein-Strasse 2, Siegen, 57068, Germany Dr. Eckart Voigts-Virchow is Professor of English and Comparative Literatures at the University of Siegen, Germany. He has published numerous books and articles on intermediality and adaptation, such as Janespotting and Beyond: British Heritage Retrovisions since the Mid1990s (2005) and Adaptations – Performing Across Media (2009). Keywords metafiction, Michael Winterbottom, A Cock and Bull Story, Laurence Sterne, Tristram Shandy › Metadaptation: Adaptation and Intermediality – Cock and Bull, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.2, 137-152. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 267-276. Mehmet Vurkaç Portland State University, 3201 Campus Drive, Purvine 2, Klamath Falls, OR, 97601, United Kingdom Keywords music theory, music education, intelligent accompaniment, music information research, machine listening, rhythm Mehmet Vurkaç is a Ph.D. candidate in Electrical and Computer Engineering at Portland State University specializing in Computational Ethnomusicology – a new field at the convergence of Music Information Retrieval, Ethnomusicology and Computational Intelligence (Tzanetakis et al. 2007: 1). He is developing an information-theoretic design methodology for Neural Networks and applying this to a complex and little-explored cultural problem: the rhythmic syntax of traditional samba music. As a long-time student, performer and teacher of samba percussion, he has been a member of several Afro-Cuban and Afro-Brazilian ensembles since 1997. He has also spent several years as co-director of the Lions of Batucada, a leading North American samba bloco that has shared the stage with Fundo de Quintal (Brazilian pagode pioneers), Sean Lennon, Aerosmith, Fishbone and David Byrne. Vurkaç taught a beginners’ samba class for nine years, and has studied various styles of samba with master Jorge Alabê. › Clave-direction analysis: A new arena for educational and creative applications of music technology, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.1, 27-46. Janice Waldron The University of Windsor, School of Music, 401 Sunset Avenue, The University of Windsor, Windsor, ON, Canada, N9B 3P4, Ontario Keywords Irish traditional music, music, adult education, community, Goderich Celtic College, internet Dr. Janice Waldron is an Associate Professor of Music Education at the University of Windsor, where she teaches Music Education and World Musics courses. While her research interests focus on informal music learning and formal music teaching in convergent on and offline communities of practice, her investigations also integrate issues of cyber ethnography, technology, ethnography, narrative inquiry, sociology, music education philosophy, vernacular music practices and gender studies. Dr. Waldron's most recent work employs cyber ethnographic method of interview and observation, narrative inquiry, and case study conducted entirely through computer-mediated communication in examination of online music communities as "communities of practice," and includes the epistemological implications of music learning and teaching in online music communities. › Once the beat gets going it really grooves: Informal music learning as experienced by two Irish traditional musicians, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 89-104. › The medium is the message: cyberspace, community, and music learning in the Irish traditional music virtual community, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 1.2&3, 99-111. › Exploring a virtual music community of practice: Informal music learning on the Internet, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 2.2&3, 97-112. › Conceptual frameworks, theoretical models and the role of YouTube: Investigating informal music learning and teaching in online music community, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 189-200. Mick Wallis University of Leeds, School of Performance & Cultural Industries, Leeds, West Yorkshire, LS2 9JT, United Kingdom Keywords design process, play, embodied knowing, responsiveness, interdisciplinarity Mick Wallis is Professor of Performance and Culture and Director of Research at the School of Performance and Cultural Industries. He is Principal Investigator for ‘Emergent Objects’ and for the AHRC-funded ‘Village Theatre Survey’, investigating the use of amateur theatre in inter-war England. Recent work includes Drama/Theatre/Performance with Simon Shepherd (Routledge, 2004) and Performance Research 10: 4, ‘On techne–’ (2005) edited with Richard Gough. › Emergent objects: Designing through performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.2&3, 269-280. Richard Wallis Binghamton University, State University of New York, 3 Park Street, Plymouth, Devon, PL3 4BL, United Kingdom Richard Wallis co-founded Streetlights Theatre Company in 1985, and since that time has worked on a wide range of youth and children’s theatre initiatives. He is currently co-director of M-ZONE, based at Mutley Baptist Church in Plymouth, and is a senior producer for Twofour Productions, an independent television company. › Notes and Queries, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.2, 145-152. Keywords cross-cultural studies, Bulgaria, Roma, Varna, Plymouth Duane Warfield The University of Iowa, Music Education Department, 205 Communications Center, Iowa City, IA 52242, United States of America Keywords women, Alaska, art, orchestra, prison A native of Belleville, Illinois, Duane Warfield is a candidate for the Doctor of Philosophy degree in Music Education at The University of Iowa. Warfield holds an undergraduate degree in Music Education from Eastern Illinois University as well as a MA in Music Education from The University of Iowa. He works as Teaching Assistant in the Music Education department, where he teaches conducting courses and supervises student teachers. › Bowing in the right direction: Hiland Mountain Correctional Center women's string orchestra programme, International Journal of Community Music, 3.1, 103-110. Tracey Warr Universiti di Siena Keywords contemporary art, London Fieldworks, art literature Dr. Tracey Warr is an art writer. She is the editor of The Artist’s Body (Phaidon, 2000) and has published writings on a wide range of artists including London Fieldworks, James Turrell, Marina Abramovic, Joan Jonas, Heather Ackroyd and Dan Harvey. Her recent publications include essays in Panic Attack!: Art in the Punk Years (Barbican, 2007) and Half Life (NVA, 2007) and a film interview with Marcus Coates for The Dawn Chorus (Bristol: Picture This DVD Publication Series, 2007). In the 1980s she held posts at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London, the Arts Council of Great Britain and Chatto & Windus Publishers. › Reviews, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 3.1, 83-. Steve Waters United Kingdom Keywords Ingmar Bergman, theatre, cinema, autobiography, aesthetics Steve Waters is a playwright, who lives in Cambridge, and has written for the stage and other media. His plays include World Music (2003/4 Sheffield Crucible and the Donmar Warehouse); Fast Labour (2008 West Yorkshire Playhouse/Hampstead Theatre); Out of Your Knowledge (2007/8 Menagerie Theatre Company, National tour and Edinburgh) and The Contingency Plan (2009 The Bush Theatre). He runs the MPhil(B) in Playwriting at the University of Birmingham, has written on Sarah Kane and Harold Pinter, and is currently writing a book on playwriting for Nick Hern Books. › Bergman's Rigour, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 25-32. › Winchester Fragments, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.1, 33-38. Ruth Way University of Plymouth Keywords performance, art, study, pedagogy, teaching practice Ruth Way is Head of Theatre and Performance at the University of Plymouth. Her practice-as-research explores collaborative practice and is developing new insights in the making of dance for the camera in collaboration with a visual/digital artist. She studied at the London School of Contemporary Dance and also with Merce Cunningham in New York. Ruth has taught and performed at the Laban Centre for Movement and Dance, for Dublin Contemporary Dance Theatre and with Earthfall Dance. › Pedagogies of Theatre (Arts) and Performance (Studies), Studies in Theatre and Performance, 25.3, 201-214. Simon Weaver University of Leicester, Department of Health Sciences, Social Science Group, Adrian Building, Leicester, LE1 7RH, United Kingdom Simon Weaver is a Research Associate in the Social Science Group of Health Sciences at the University of Leicester and a Visting Fellow in the Department of Social Science at Loughborough University. His research interests include theories of rhetoric, humour (especially in relation to racist and other forms of offensive humour), social and cultural theory, and semiotics. Keywords culture, semiotics, humour, race, offensive humour › The reverse discourse and resistance of Asian comedians in the West, Comedy Studies, 1.2, 149-157. Rebecca Weber Somanaut Dance, 2167 E Susquehanna Ave #2, Philadelphia, PA, 19125, United States of America Keywords teaching practices, somatics, contemporary arts, dance, semi-structured framework, somatic movement, dance education, choreography, performance, theatre Rebecca Weber holds a MA in Dance and Somatic Well-Being: Connections to the Living Body (UK) from the University of Central Lancashire. She is an academic and artist who seeks to find the places where dance and somatics intersect, incorporating them into both her teaching and personal dance practices. She is currently dancing and developing a somatic movement dance education practice in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (USA). › Integrating semi-structured somatic practices and contemporary dance technique training, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 237-254. Peter R. Webster Northwestern University, Bienen School of Music, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA. 711 Elgin Road, Evanston, IL 60208 Keywords Peter Webster is the John Beattie Professor of Music Education and Technology. He is the author of Measures of Creative Thinking in Music, an exploratory tool for assessing music thinking using quasiimprovisational tasks. He is also co-author of Experiencing Music Technology, 3rd edition Update (Cengage/Schirmer, 2008) and is coeditor of the new two-volume MENC Oxford Research Handbook on Music Learning (Oxford University Press, 2012). › Key research in music technology and music teaching and learning, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 115-130. Hannele Weir City University London, Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in Professional Practice, School of Hannele Weir is a Lecturer in Applied Sociology, in the Department of Interdisciplinary Studies in Professional Practice, School of Community and Health Sciences at City University London. She is currently involved in a research project on Art, social inclusion and the Community Programme at Tate Modern. Community and Health Sciences, Northampton Square, London, EC1V 0HB, United Kingdom › You don’t have to like them: Art, Tate Modern and learning, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.1, 93-110. Keywords art, violence, learning, practice, museum Rachel Weissbrod Bar Ilan University, Department of Translation and Interpreting Studies, Ramat Gan, 52900, Israel Keywords translation, adaptation, intersemiotic, photography, Holocaust Dr. Rachel Weissbrod is a senior lecturer in the Department of Translation and Interpreting Studies at Bar Ilan University, Israel. Her areas of research include the theory of translation, literary translation into Hebrew, translation for the media and intersemiotic translation. (She has published in Multilingua, Target, The Translator, , Across Languages and Cultures, Jostrans, Borderlands and more.) Her book Not by Word Alone, Fundamental Issues in Translation (in Hebrew) was published by The Open University of Israel in 2007. › Translating Words into Visual Signs:Face Photography in The Summer of Aviya and The Island on Bird Street, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 1.3, 221-235. Graham F. Welch University of London, Department of Early Childhood and Primary Education, Culture, Communication and Media, Institute of Education University of London, 20 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AL Keywords Professor Graham Welch holds the Institute of Education, University of London Established Chair of Music Education and is Head of the Institute's Department of Early Childhood and Primary Education. He is president of the International Society for Music Education (ISME), elected chair of the internationally based Society for Education, Music and Psychology Research (SEMPRE) and past co-chair of the Research Commission of ISME. Current visiting professorships include the Universities of Queensland (Australia), Limerick (Eire) and Roehampton (UK). He is also a member of the UK Arts and Humanities Research Council's (AHRC) Review College for Music and has been a specialist consultant for government departments and agencies in the UK, Italy, Sweden, USA, Ukraine, UAE, South Africa and Argentina on aspects of music, education and teacher education. Publications number over 270 and embrace musical development and music education, teacher education, the psychology of music, singing and voice science, as › The arts and humanities, technology and the 'English Baccalaureate': STEAM not STEM, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 245-250. Susan West Australian National University, School of Music, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia Keywords music education, life-long engagement, community Dr. Susan West trained in music performance at the Melbourne University Conservatorium of Music and obtained a postgraduate diploma in music education from the Kodaly Institute of Hungary. She played with the West Australian Symphony Orchestra and was a Principal Flute with the Sydney Symphony Orchestra before moving to the ANU. She has a master’s degree in Gifted and Talented Education and her Ph.D. developed a theoretical framework for the innovative Music Education Program she established and developed at the ANU School of Music. Her approach to music education based on a social model of community outreach has resulted in several national awards and is also the subject of a range of films produced and in production by Ronin Films, Australia. › The Australian National University Music Education Programme: developing a new approach to ongoing engagement in music making for all ages, International Journal of Community Music, 2.2&3, 241-254. Sarah Whatley ICELAB at Coventry University, Coventry School of Art and Design, ICE building, Priory Street, Coventry, CV1 5FB, United Kingdom Keywords dance, digital media, archiving, corporeality, collaboration, interactivity Sarah Whatley is Professor of Dance at Coventry University. She is a writer and artist and her research specializes in dance analysis and the interface between dance and digital technologies. She led the Siobhan Davies archive project. Amongst her other research projects she is a member of the AHRC-funded Screendance Network and is international associate for a pan-European research cluster, Inside Movement Knowledge. She edits the International Journal of Dance and Somatic Practices and is on the Editorial Board of the International Journal of Screendance. › Born digital; dance in the digital age, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 5.1, 51-63. › Editorial, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 3-4. › Editorial, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.2, 141-142. › Editorial, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 3-4. Vincent White University of British Columbia, Department of Language and Literacy Education, 2329 West Mall, Vancouver, BC, V6T 1Z4, Canada Keywords performance, research, ethics, inner voices, ethnic studies Vincent White is an instructor in the Faculty of Education at the University of British Columbia where he completed a doctorate in the Department of Language and Literacy Education. Both his programme of research and university teaching are interdisciplinary in nature as he incorporates the fields of counselling psychology and educational leadership in his scholarship. Vincent continues to work as a counsellor and learning support teacher in the public education system. His research interests include power and organizational dynamics, individual and systemic change in educational settings, research-based theatre, and narrative inquiry. Vincent has also published in the International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education and Arts Praxis. › Whose story is it anyway? Exploring ethical dilemmas in performed research, Performing Ethos: An International Journal of Ethics in Theatre & Performance, 1.1, 85-95. Mike White St. Chad’s College, University of Durham, 18 North Bailey, Durham, DH1 3RH, United Kingdom Keywords consultation, practice, participation, art, health Mike White is a Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Medical Humanities and St. Chad’s College, University of Durham, United Kingdom. His work for the centre has included workforce development programmes in arts-in-health, project-based evaluations, and audits and literature reviews of arts-in-health for government agencies. In 2005 he was awarded a fellowship of the UK’s National Endowment for Science, Technology and the Arts to research community-based arts in health and to build both national and international links in this field. Radcliffe, Oxford, published the resulting book, Arts Development in Community Health – ocial Tonic, in 2009. › Developing guidelines for good practice in participatory arts-in-health-care contexts, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.2, 139-155. Birgit Wiens LMU – Ludwig- MaximiliansUniversität München, Theaterwissenschaft, Georgenstr. 11, München, 80799, Germany Keywords shifts of visual perception, scenic modules, modularity, material movability, light, electric light Dr. Birgit Wiens is currently working on a Research Project ‘Intermediale Szenographie’ (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München). Ph.D. in Theatre Studies (LMU Munich, 1998). As a curator, dramaturg and project leader, she has worked for ZKM|Centre for Art and Media, Karlsruhe, and other institutions. 2004–09 Professor for Theatre Studies, Academy of Fine Arts, Dresden. She has been Member of the FIRT/IFTR Research Group ’Intermediality’ since 2003. Her publications include numerous articles on acting and performance theory, art in public space and scenography in the twentieth/twenty-first century. Recent book project: G. Bandstetter/B. Wiens (Eds.): Theater ohne Fluchtpunkt/Theatre without Vanishing Points. The Heritage of Adolphe Appia: Scenography and Choreography in Contemporary Theatre. Berlin (Alexander Verlag) 2010. › Modular settings and Creative Light: The legacy of Adolphe Appia in the digital age, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 25-39. Stan Wijnans Cruquiuskade 267, 1018 AM, Amsterdam, Netherlands Keywords ChoreoSonic, spatiality, sound, robotics Stan Wijnans is an interactive sonic artist, researcher and MAX/MSP/Jitter programmer whose latest work entails collaborations with robotics artist Stelarc, her interactive dance and sound performance ‘Frozen White’ at the ICA, London, and collaborations with choreographers Sarah Rubidge, Sophia Lycouris, Isabel Rocamora amongst others. She has been employed by the Nottingham Trent University and the University of Chichester, UK as composer, MAX/MSP programmer and BA/MA student advisor. She taught workshops at several art institutions and Universities in the Netherlands, UK and Taiwan. Recently she completed her Ph.D. research that investigated the practical and theoretical potential of mapping parameters from real time (spatial) body movement into interactive 3D surround sound composition. She also holds an MA in interactive robotics and sound performance. › Sound Skeleton’: Interactive transformation of improvised dance movements into a spatial sonic disembodiment, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 27-44. Danielle Wilde The University of Tokyo, Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory Meta Perception Group, Japan Keywords body, interactivity, performance, embodiment Danielle Wilde is an artist and design researcher who currently shares her time between the Ishikawa Komuro Laboratory at the University of Tokyo, Japan and Monash University (Fine Art) and CSIRO (Materials Sciences and Engineering) in Melbourne and Belmont, Australia. She also operates as an independent artist. Her research is concerned with how technology might be paired with the body to poeticise experience. Her art is concerned with using this knowledge to shake things up and feel more alive. Through her practice and writing she continually questions and blurs boundaries between art, research and everyday life. She has an MA in Interaction Design from the Royal College of Art in London and is currently completing a Ph.D. in the Poetics of Embodied Interaction, in relation to body-worn technologies. › hipDisk: Using sound to encourage physical extension, exploring humour in interface design, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 4.1, 7-26. Ian Wilkie University of London, Institute of Education, 20 Bedford Way, London, WC1H 0AL, United Kingdom Ian Wilkie is a professional actor and a tutor in post-compulsory education at the Institute of Education, London. He is currently undertaking research into comic performance at the University of Aberystwyth. Keywords adult-child interaction, Child Directed Speech (CDS), repetition, incongruity, nonsense › The origins of comic performance in adultchild interaction, Comedy Studies, 1.1, 21-32. David Brian Williams Illinois State University, Bloomington IL, USA Keywords Dr. David Brian Williams is Professor Emeritus of Music and Arts Technology at Illinois State University and is currently serving as President of The College Music Society. His scholarly and music activity embraces arts technology, music education and psychology, and composition. Recent works include Experiencing Music Technology (third edition updated) co-authored with Peter R. Webster (Schirmer Cengage Learning, 2009); 'Psychomusicology: A program, a journal, and divergent paths' with James Carlsen and Jack Taylor for the journal Psychomusicology: Music, Mind, & Brain (issue 20, 2009); and the multimedia composition, Grassroots 2012, co-composed with Tayloe Harding, and performed in Richmond, Virginia, and Bloomington, Illinois. › The non-traditional music student in secondary schools of the United States: Engaging non-participant students in creative music activities through technology, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 4.2-3, 131-147. Amanda Williamson University of Central Lancashire, School of Art, Design and Performance, University of Central Lancashire, Preston, PR1 2HE, United Kingdom Keywords support, heart, relaxation, community Amanda Williamson is the founder of the MA 'Dance and Somatic Wellbeing: Connections to the Living Body', United Kingdom/United States. She is a senior lecturer at the University of Central Lancashire, School of Art, Design and Performance, and is the course leader for the MA programme in New York. Amanda is currently editing a book entitled Dance, Somatics and Spiritualities: Contemporary Sacred Narratives – Leading Voices in the Field. Amanda sits on the editorial board for the journal Dance and Somatic Practices, and is involved in the development of new post-graduate MA programmes in dance and spirituality internationally. Her area of expertise is contemporary spirituality and dance/movement, and in addition research and publishing in innovative areas. › Formative support and connection: somatic movement dance education in community and client practice, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 1.1, 29-45. › Reflections and theoretical approaches to the study of spiritualities within the field of somatic movement dance education, Journal of Dance & Somatic Practices, 2.1, 35-61. Robert Wilsmore York St John University, Lord Mayor’s Walk, York, YO31 7EX, United Kingdom Keywords collaboration, Goat Island, performance Dr. Robert Wilsmore is Head of Creative Practice in the Faculty of Arts at York St John University. His research engages with performance, composition, musicology, collaboration and pedagogy. Recent publications include articles on prog rock group 'Yes' for Routledge journal Parallax (issue 56, 2010) and a chapter in Kraftwerk: Music Non-Stop for Continuum Books (2011) joint authored with Simon Piasecki. › The demonic and the divine: Unfixing replication in the phenomenology of sampling, Journal of Music, Technology and Education, 3.1, 5-16. Michael Wilson University College Falmouth, 25 Woodlane, Falmouth, Cornwall, T11 4RH, United Kingdom Keywords Munich cabaret, Karl Valentin, Liesl Karlstadt, politics, storytelling, Brecht Michael Wilson started his career as a professional storyteller and is now Dean of the School of Media and Performance at University College Falmouth. Previously he was Head of Research at the Cardiff School of Creative and Cultural Industries. He is the author of Performance and Practice: Oral Narrative Traditions among Teenagers in Britain and Ireland (1997), (with Richard Hand) GrandGuignol (2002), Storytelling and Theatre (2005) and (with Richard Hand) London's Grand-Guignol (2007). › Revisiting Brecht: preparing Galileo for production, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 22.3, 145-158. › Karl Valentin's ‘Father and Son Discuss the War’, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 27.1, 5-12. › ‘I am a Poor, Skinny Man’: Persona and physicality in the work of Karl Valentin, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 28.3, 213-221. Julie Wilson-Bokowiec University of Huddersfield, Centre for Research in New Music, Queensgate, Huddersfield, West Yorkshire, HD1 3DH, United Kingdom Keywords technology, body, interactivity Julie is a theatre/performance artist and a Research Fellow (CeReNeM – Centre for Research in New Music) at the University of Huddersfield. She began developing interactive work with composer Mark Bokowiec in 1995. Since then she has performed internationally and works with the Bodycoder System. Major performances and commissions include Spiral Fiction (2002) for Digital Summer; Cyborg Dreaming (2000/01) commissioned by the Science Museum, London; Zeitgeist at the KlangArt Festival; and Lifting Bodies (1999) at the Trafo, Budapest; as featured artists at the Hungarian Computer Music Foundation Festival NEW WAVES supported by the British Council; and the Vox Circuit Trilogy (2007) at the Watermans in London. › Physicality: The techne of the physical in interactive digital performance, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 6.1, 61-75. Brenda Winter Queen’s University Belfast, 4 Lennox Avenue, Newton Park, Saintfield Road, Belfast, BT8 6LA, United Kingdom Keywords research, archiving, popular theatre, disability, Irish theatre Brenda Winter is an actress, director and writer. She was a founder member of Charabanc, the ground-breaking women’s theatre collective in the 1980s, founder and first artistic director of Replay (1989–96), and (1998–2004) creative director of the Mixed Peppers Theatre Arts Training Programme for young people with motor disabilities. Since 2004, she has taught theatre at Queen’s University, Belfast, and wrote a play called Just Shiels. › When Shiels met Liberace: a skirmish with the canon of Irish theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 29.3, 239-252. Julia Winterson University of Huddersfield, United Kingdom, Department of Music, Media and Humanities, Queensgate, Huddersfield, HD1 3DH, United Kingdom Keywords music, creativity, outreach, orchestra Julia Winterson combines part-time lecturing at the University of Huddersfield with freelance writing. She has also worked as the Music Qualification Leader for Edexcel and as Head of New Music for Peters Edition. Her Dr.Phil research at the University of York was in the education work of orchestras and opera companies. Commissioned research includes work for QCA, Opera North, London Sinfonietta and the Arts Council. She is a member of the Music Publishers Association Education and Training Committee and the International Society for Contemporary Music British Section. Publications include six anthologies of music for schools, Pop Music: The Text Book and numerous articles for music magazines and journals, including the British Journal of Music Education, Arts and Humanities in Higher Education and Classroom Music. › So what's new? A survey of the educational policies of orchestras and opera companies, International Journal of Community Music, 3.3, 355-363. Reba Wissner Brandeis University Music Department, Slosberg Music Center, MS 051, 415 South Street, Waltham, Massachusetts, 2454, United States of America Keywords early music, prologue, Francesco Cavalli, seventeenthcentury opera, linguistics Reba Alaina Wissner is a Ph.D. candidate in Musicology at Brandeis University. She holds Bachelor of Arts Degrees in Music and Italian from Hunter College of the City University of New York and a Master of Fine Arts Degree in Musicology from Brandeis University. Her dissertation is entitled ‘Of Gods, Myths, and Mortals: Francesco Cavalli’s L’Elena (1659)’. She is a recipient of numerous awards, including an Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Dissertation Research Grant. In addition to early opera, Wissner’s other research interests include the relationship between music and politics, Jewish music, and music and immigration. › To sleep perchance to sing: the suspension of disbelief in the prologue to Francesco Cavalli's Gli Amori d'Apollo e di Dafne (1640), Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.1, 5-13. Stacy Wolf Princeton University, Lewis Center for the Arts, 185 Nassau Street, Princeton, NJ, 8544, United States of America Keywords Bruce Kirle, music, theatre, dance Stacy Wolf is Associate Professor in Theater at Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts She holds a BA in English from Yale and an MA in Drama from the University of Virginia. She received her Ph.D. in Theatre from the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She has published articles on theatre spectatorship, performance pedagogy, and musical theatre in many journals, including Theatre Journal, Modern Drama and Women and Performance. From 2001–2003 she was the editor of Theatre Topics: A Journal of Pedagogy and Praxis. Her book, A Problem Like Maria: Gender and Sexuality in the American Musical was published by the University of Michigan Press in 2002. › Introduction to Bruce Kirle Memorial Panel debut papers in music-theatredance, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.3, 273-276. Alain Wolf University of Norwich, School of Language and Communication Studies, Norwich, NR4 7TG, United Kingdom Dr. Alain Wolf is a lecturer in Language and Translation Studies at the University of East Anglia. He specializes in intercultural pragmatics and translation studies. His most recent work has focused on the recovery of inferences in translated literary texts, film adaptations and religious discourse. › Reviews, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.1, 79-88. Keywords adaptation, ideology, implied meaning, fidelity, translation, symbolism › Mobilizing meaning?: religious symbolism in film adaptations of C. S. Lewis's The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 2.3, 239-254. Elizabeth L. Wollman Baruch College, B7-235, 55 Lexington Avenue, New York, New York, 10010, United States of America Keywords feminism, homosexuality, Elizabeth L. Wollman is Assistant Professor of music at Baruch College, City University of New York. She is the author of the book The Theater Will Rock: A History of the Rock Musical, from Hair to Hedwig (2006), and the article ‘The Economic Development of the “New” Times Square and Its Impact on the Broadway Musical’ (2002). She is currently completing a manuscript tentatively titled Hard Times: The Adult Musical in 1970s New York City, which will be published by Oxford University Press. Her research interests include American gender studies, Oh! Calcutta!, Let My People Come, Mod Donna popular music, the musical theatre, gender studies, and the cultural history of New York City. › Emancipation or exploitation? Gender liberation and adult musicals in 1970s New York, Studies in Musical Theatre, 2.1, 5-32. › Musical theatre and the almighty dollar: What a tangled web they weave, Studies in Musical Theatre, 5.1, 3-12. Malcolm Womack Malcolm Womack is a Ph.D. candidate in Drama from the University of Washington, where he taught Play Analysis and American Theatre History. He is currently completing his dissertation on performances at Harlem’s Cotton Club in the 1920s and 1930s. Keywords adaptation, feminism, Catherine Johnson, Mamma Mia!, musicals › ‘Thank You For the Music’: Catherine Johnson's feminist revoicings in Mamma Mia!, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.2, 201-211. Graham Wood Coker College, 300 East College Avenue, Hartsville, SC, 29550, United States of America Keywords Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II, ‘Ten Minutes Ago’, Disney, Cinderella Graham Wood is Associate Professor of Music at Coker College in Hartsville, South Carolina, where he teaches courses in music history, world music, film music, and the history of Broadway and Hollywood musicals. A native of England, he has a BA in music from the University of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, and an MA and Ph.D. in musicology from the University of Minnesota in Minneapolis. He is coordinator of the music and musical theatre programs at Coker College, and regularly produces and conducts musical theatre productions and showcases. Graham is currently a member of the editorial board of Studies in Musical Theatre and his chapter entitled ‘Why do they start to sing and dance all of a sudden? Examining the Film Musical’ appears in the second edition of The Cambridge Companion to the Musical (2008). › Ten Minutes and Fifty (Two) Years Ago: the three TV versions of Rodgers and Hammerstein's Cinderella, Studies in Musical Theatre, 3.1, 109-116. Bethany Wood University of Wisconsin–Madison, 41 Braeger Dr, Fitchburg, Wisconsin, WI Bethany Wood is a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Wisconsin– Madison, where she earned her MA in Theatre Research and a Certificate in Gender and Women’s Studies. Her article ‘Incorporation of the Incar(nation): Dorothy L. Sayers’s The Man Born to be King’ 53713, United States of America appears in the Fall 2010 issue of Ecumenica. Keywords adaptation, gender studies, female culture, Show Boat, Edna Ferber › Ol' (wo)man river?: Broadway's gendering of Edna Ferber's Show Boat, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 321-330. Sheila C. Woodward University of Southern California, Thornton School of Music, 3407 Trousdale Parkway, Los Angeles, California 90089-0851, United States of America Sheila Woodward is Assistant Professor of Music Education at the USC Thornton School. She is a native of and earned her Ph.D. in music education from the University of Cape Town in 1993. She received a Performers' Licentiate from the Royal School of Music (London) in 1981. An award-winning researcher, her work has been published and presented internationally and includes a focus on the fields of prenatal and neonatal response to music. Keywords juvenile offenders, music education, law, mentors, Africa › South Africa, the arts and youth in conflict with the law, International Journal of Community Music, 1.1, 69-88. Roger Wooster The University Of Wales, Newport, Performing Arts, City Campus, Usk Way, Newport, NP20 2BP, United Kingdom Keywords TIE, health, education, drama, theatre Roger Wooster worked in Theatre In Education as a founder member of Open Cast Theatre and as part of Theatr Powys where he helped develop the company’s participatory approach to TIE. Since 1990, he has worked in Further and Higher Education, contributing to a number of journals and publishing Contemporary Theatre in Education in 2007. He is currently at The University of Wales Newport where he is Senior Lecturer in Performing Arts and Applied Drama. › Theatre in education: More than just a health message, Journal of Applied Arts & Health, 1.3, 281-294. Andrew Wyllie University of the West of England, School of English and Drama, Coldharbour Lane, Bristol, BS16 1QY, United Kingdom Keywords gender, sexuality, queer theory, race, class Andrew Wyllie is Senior Lecturer in Drama at the University of the West of England. His Ph.D. thesis is titled 'Gender and Sexuality in Post-War British Drama', which has now evolved into his book Sex on Stage: Gender and Sexuality in Post-War British Drama, published by Intellect Books in 2009. Most of his research work has been in the socio-politics of modern drama, and especially in the area covered by 'queer theory' - the dynamics of presences and absences based on gender, sexuality, race and class. He is also interested in the broader relationship between dramatic literature and the self, and especially in the question of the role of tragedy in the twenty-first century - including the most basic question: 'does such a role actually exist?'. › Editorial, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 30.3, 247-247. Christine Young-Gerber Christine Young-Gerber holds a BFA in performance from Northern Kentucky University, an MA in theatre from the University of Kentucky, and an MFA in musical theatre from the University of Central Florida. She works professionally as an actor in regional theatres, performing from Florida to Alaska, and New Hampshire to California in notable theatres including Flat Rock Playhouse and Orlando Shakespeare Theatre. Other research interests include incorporating and overcoming female stereotypes in performance. She currently teaches humanities at Pacific University in Forest Grove, Oregon in the Seminar Program. Pacific University, 4010 Robin Pl. #11, West Linn, Oregon, 97068, United States of America Keywords Assassins, Cats, A Chorus Line, Company, concept musical › Attention must be paid, cried the balladeer: The concept musical defined, Studies in Musical Theatre, 4.3, 331-342. Alberto Zambenedetti New York University, College of Staten Island, 2800 Victory Boulevard, New York, New York, United States of America Keywords Italian cinema, Benetton, Gianni Amelio, Ferzan Ozpetek, Marco Ponti, short fiction film Alberto Zambenedetti was born and raised in Venice, Italy. He has a Laurea in Foreign Languages and Literatures from Università degli Studi di Venezia, Ca’ Foscari, a Master’s degree in Cinema Studies from New York University, and he is currently pursuing a Ph.D. in Italian Studies from the same institution. › Introducing Shakespeare: The incipit in Orson Welles’s adaptations, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 39-52. Yael Zarhy-Levo Tel-Aviv University, Department of Literature, Ramat Aviv, Haim Levanon St., Tel Aviv, 69978, Israel Keywords The Servant (novella and film), The British New Wave, Joseph Losey, Harold Pinter, choreography, adaptation, theatre, dance, Matthew Dr. Yael Zarhy-Levo is a Senior Lecturer in the Department of Literature at Tel-Aviv University, Israel, where she teaches theatre history, theatre criticism and modern British Theatre. Her publications include The Theatrical Critic as Cultural Agent: Constructing Pinter, Orton and Stoppard as Absurdist Playwrights (Peter Lang, 2001); The Making of Theatrical Reputations: Studies from the Modern London Theatre (Studies in Theatre History and Culture, Thomas Postlewait (ed.), University of Iowa Press, 2008); articles in Poetics, Theatre History Studies, Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism, Theatre Survey and Theatre Research International; and chapters in he Bourne Cambridge Companion to Harold Pinter (Cambridge, 2001, and 2nd ed., 2009), and, with Freddie Rokem, in Writing & Rewriting National Theatre Histories (University of Iowa Press, 2004). › Dramatists under a label: Martin Esslin’s The Theatre of the Absurd and Aleks Sierz’ In-Yer-Face Theatre, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.3, 315-326. › How far can you go in telling a story without using words?, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.2, 173-188. Phillip Zarrilli University of Exeter, Department of Drama and Dance, Thornlea, New North Road, Exeter, EX4 4LA, United Kingdom Keywords director, Asian martial arts, Samuel Beckett Phillip Zarrilli is a director and is internationally known for training actors in psychophysical process through Asian martial/meditation arts. He runs a private studio (Tyn-y-parc C.V.N. Kalari/Studio) in Wales, and conducts workshops throughout the world. His productions of Samuel Beckett's plays in Los Angeles (2000), Austria (2001), and Ireland (2004) have won critical acclaim and awards for 'best actress' and 'courageous production' in Los Angeles. In 2002 he collaborated with UK-based award-winning playwright, Kaite O'Reilly and Theatre ASOU (Austria) on a semi-devised performance, Speaking Stones, that opened in Austria in September, 2002, received its English premiere in Wroclaw, Poland in 2003, and was again performed in Aflenz, Austria in 2004. In 2004 he also directed Ota Shogo's The Water Station for TTRP at The Esplanade Theatres on the Bay in Singapore. › Negotiating Performance Epistemologies: knowledges 'about', 'in' and 'for', Studies in Theatre and Performance, 21.1, 31-46. › Notes and queries 2, Studies in Theatre and Performance, 31.1, 121-122. Elizabeth Zauderer Sapir College, Israel, 14 Adam HaCohen Street, TelAviv, 64585, Israel Elizabeth Zauderer is a faculty member in the Departments of English and Liberal Arts at Sapir Academic College. Her research interests are adaptation theory, Shakespeare on film, film theory and cultural studies. Keywords theatre, Shakespeare › Seeing double: Shakespeare’s polysemy in film. The case of Lady Anne in Richard III, Journal of Adaptation in Film & Performance, 4.1, 53-67. Gong Zhifang Gong Zhifang has a Masters in Directing, and worked for the Community Music Education Center (Music Education Branch). The Open University of China, Department of Directing, National Academy of Chinese Theatre Arts, No. 400 Wanquansi, Fengtai District, Beijing, 100073, China › Communication and responsibility: Open universities in China and community music education, International Journal of Community Music, 4.1, 15-21. Keywords education, communication, music 1950s Anthony Bushard Jessica Sternfeld actor training Alison Hodge Mark Cariston Seton aesthetics Roger Palmer Steve Waters 3Dwiki Toni Sant actors Alistair D. N. Edwards affect Elise Morrison 4D design Jeffrey Johnson Sophia Lycouris adaptation Frances Babbage Deborah Cartmell Paul J. C. M Franssen Yvonne Griggs Steffen Hantke Claire Hind Claire Hind Ceri Hovland Bernhard Kuhn Tiel Lundy Jim O’Loughlin Laurence Raw James Reynolds Jesse Schlotterbeck Stella Sorby Jeremy Strong Alex Symons Rachel Weissbrod Alain Wolf Malcolm Womack Bethany Wood Yael Zarhy-Levo Africa Jane Collins David Francis Vuyisile Mathiti Julia Sloth-Nielsen Sheila C. Woodward A Chorus Line Zachary Dunbar Christine Young-Gerber A Cock and Bull Story Eckart Voigts-Virchow A Little Night Music Steve Swayne A.E.W. Mason Vincent L. Barnett aboriginal Mary E. Piercey acousmatic composition Matthew Barnard adult education Cathy Augustin Cindy L. Bell Don D. Coffman Andrew Krikun Nathan B. Kruse Janice Waldron acoustic ecology Matthew Barnard acting Eric T. Hetzler Kate Napier Derek Paget David Roberts Mark Taylor-Batty acting theory Eric T. Hetzler active aging Jane E. Southcott activity theory Pamela Burnard adult music making Jeffrey E. Bush African American music Sheelagh Chadwick Rowan Oliver African diaspora Pamyla A. Stiehl African music Elizabeth Oehrle African studies André de Quadros African theatre Chukwuma Okoye ageing Christopher J Alfano Hilary Bungay Peter De Vries Paul G. Dempster Chee-Hoo Lum adult-child interaction Matthew Saxton Ian Wilkie ageing female body Sharon Lockyer advertising Victor I. Ukaegbu Agnes DeMille Kurt Jensen Aeschylus Anastasia Belina AHRB Roberta Mock Angela Piccini aesthetic journalism digital formalism Michael Takeo Magruder Aida Bernhard Kuhn Aikido Sasha Roubicek analytical model Elke Huwiler Alaska Duane Warfield anarchism James Reynolds Alexander Technique Jess Allen androgyny Pamela Karantonis Alfred Uhry Doug Reside Anglophilia James Harris Algebra of Parapraxis David Fenton algorithms John T. O’Donnell anguage Gerard Matte animatuer Lee Higgins alternative music Russ Bestley Annie Lennox Lucy O’Brien Alvaro del Amo Cristina Cano Vara anthropological approach Valentina Iadeluca Andrea Sangiorgio American and British theatre Hsin-yun Ou American culture Tiel Lundy American drama Garrett Eisler American literature Dennis Cutchins anthropology Alison Phipps anti-war Helen Ostovich applied choreography Alec Robertson applied drama Hazel Barnes Sarah Jane Dickenson American music David E. Myers Jennifer Oates American musicals Hilary Baker America's Japan Barbara Thornbury applied theatre Teresa A Fisher Katharine Low architecture Steve Benford Jonathan Foster Jeffrey Johnson Stewart Kember Sophia Lycouris Dermott Mcmeel archiving Frances Babbage Harmony Bench Steve Benford Tom Burvill Jonathan Foster Gabriella Giannachi Graham Ley Duncan Rowland Ross Varney Sarah Whatley Brenda Winter Arctic Mary E. Piercey Arnold Wesker Paul J. C. M Franssen art Deborah Barkun Vincent L. Barnett Katye Coe Scott deLahunta Jools Gilson-Ellis Paul Granjon LaResse Harvey David G. Hebert Susan Kozel Christopher McCullough Phillip McIntyre Nancy Menning Joe Moran Julie Tiernan Naphtaly Shem Tov Duane Warfield Ruth Way Hannele Weir Mike White art and design Gill Greaves art development Lesley Seeger art education Michael I. Jackson Albert Jewell Frances Rifkin art literature Tracey Warr art therapy Gill Greaves Albert Jewell Anne Lanceley Usha Menon Lesley Seeger Artaud Jennifer Shryane articulation Vida. L. Midgelow arts Brian Crow Katja Krebs Jacquelyn Ford Morie Sally Jane Norman arts therapy Hod Orkibi assessment feedback Steve Cooper Judith Sebesta Tim Stephenson asylum seekers Rand Hazou autism Melissa Trimingham audience Awo Mana Asiedu Marie Louise Bourbeau Elizabeth Boyce Jane Collins Patrick Duggan Braínne Edge Simon Ellis Roger Palmer Colin Poole Stella Sorby Jenn Stephenson autobiography Rea Dennis Dee Heddon Steve Waters audience perceptions Geoffrey Edwards autoethnographic research John Freeman avant-garde Gunter Berghaus Kurt Taroff Avenue Q Hilary Baker art-technology Dave Everitt Alec Robertson audiences Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen Nick Moran Asia Lim Swee Hong audito Jem Kelly backward glance Siân Adiseshiah Asian martial arts Phillip Zarrilli auditory awareness James Mooney Bakhtin Rob Conkie David Roesner Asian popular culture Claire Pamment augmented reality Simon Biggs Stephen Fernandez George Gagneré Christian Jacquemin Daniel Jernigan Russell Pensyl Lee Shangping Asian studies André de Quadros Asian theatre Ashley Thorpe Assassins Christine Young-Gerber Australia Graeme Harper Gillian Harrison Rand Hazou Kerrie Schaefer assessment Dita Judith Federman Roy Priest Australian Art Orchestra Gillian Howell authenticity Jessica Hillman Judith A Sebesta ayurveda Ashlee Ramsey Balázs Erin Brannigan ballet Henrietta Bannerman Necla Çikigil Bill Ribbans Barcelona Anton Pujol Baroness Orczy Vincent L. Barnett Baroque Jennifer Cable baseball Jessica Sternfeld Billy Elliot George Rodosthenous body-mind centering Jess Allen Battery Opera Daniel Mroz Billy Rose Geoffrey Block Bollywood Kristen Rudisill Baz Luhrmann Hilary Baker binaural method Matthew Barnard Boucicault Rob Dean Bazin Marco Grosoli biography Deborah Cartmell Rineke Smilde Bourdieu Dimple Godiwala BebéBabá Helena Rodrigues Beckett Cristina Cano Vara Graham Saunders Kathy Smith Mark Taylor-Batty Beijing opera Megan Evans Bell Shakespeare Company Rob Conkie Benetton Alberto Zambenedetti Benjamin Franklin Rick Mitchell bereavement Paul G. Dempster Bernstein William A. Everett Bhodhidharma Jerri Daboo biculturalism Nancy Menning Billie Whitelaw Mark Taylor-Batty biopsychology Linda J. Thomson bipolar Peter Amsel Black British theatre Claire Cochrane Brazil Frank Abrahams Brazilian theatre Pedro de Senna Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Bleak House Rachel Carroll Brecht David Allen Oliver Double Angelos Koutsourakis Peter Thomson Michael Wilson Boal Teresa A Fisher Brigadoon Jennifer Oates body Ann Cooper Albright Vasso Barboussi Jaime del Val Denise Doyle Martha Eddy Mary Noonan Mary Oliver Rachel O’Riordan Ivani Santana Kathy Smith Anna Vidali Danielle Wilde Julie Wilson-Bokowiec Brighton John Bennett body image Emma Meehan body-based responses Hilary Kneale Britain Dimple Godiwala Karen Morden British Acousmatics Joseph Anderson British arts Victoria Lowe Chris Ritchie Aleks Sierz British Asian theatre Claire Cochrane British popular culture Russ Bestley Candide William A. Everett British Sign Language (BSL) Ashley Thorpe Canetti James Harris British theatre Vicky Angelaki John Bennett Claire Cochrane Ben Francombe capitalism Ewa Mazierska caricatures James Harris Broadway Paul Christman Paul R. Laird Robert Meffe Tracey Moore Alex Symons Jeffrey Ullom carnival Roger Clegg Rob Conkie Karen Morden David Robb Bruce Kirle Judith Sebesta Stacy Wolf Buffy Mary Jo Lodge Bulgaria Richard Wallis business Freda Chapple Butoh Paul Allain Frances Barbe California Joe Fierro Calixto Bieito Kara McKechnie Camel Xiangzi Megan Evans cancan Clare Parfitt-Brown celebrity Jason Fitzgerald Jenn Stephenson censorship David Robb Michael Thompson charity Michael I. Jackson Charles Dickens Rachel Carroll David Chandler Charles Mingus George Burrows carnivale Ruth Shade Charlotte Selver Rebecca Loukes carnivalesque Rachel Kirk chatterbots Kevin Brown Carola Speads Rebecca Loukes Chekhov David Allen Caroline Aaron C. Thomas Chico Buarque Pedro de Senna Caryl Churchill Mary Luckhurst Child Directed Speech (CDS) Matthew Saxton Ian Wilkie Cassandra Anastasia Belina childhood Michael Carklin Allan Hewitt Catalan cinema Anton Pujol Catherine Johnson Malcolm Womack Cats Christine Young-Gerber CD Joe Fierro Chinese martial arts Daniel Mroz Chinese theatre Megan Evans Ashley Thorpe Chinoiserie Hsin-yun Ou choir Cindy L. Bell Jane Bentley Mary Copland Kennedy Thomas Langston Roger Palmer Debbie Rohwer Mark Rohwer Lim Swee Hong choral singing Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart Grayson Cooke George Gagneré Marco Grosoli Markos Hadjioannou Christian Jacquemin Clare Parfitt-Brown Steve Waters city Duška Radosavljević civil rights Kathryn Edney Choreodrome Elizabeth Boyce Simon Ellis Colin Poole Clare Davidson Yuko Kurahashi Christianity C. Michael Hawn Greg Scheer Lim Swee Hong Cinderella Graham Wood cinema Michael Carklin Colin Poole Elizabeth Boyce colonial Jane Collins Claudio Monteverdi George Burrows comedic functions Peter O’Rourke class Jeremy Strong Andrew Wyllie chorus Sheelagh Chadwick Zachary Dunbar Casey J. Hayes Evangelos Himonides David Haldane Lawrence classical music Roger Palmer choreography Helen Bailey Harmony Bench Melissa Blanco Borelli Carol Brown Sue Hawksley Claudia Kappenberg Susan Kozel Petra Kuppers Alys Longley Ray Miller David Ian Rabey Stephen Rothman Sarah Rubidge Pamyla A. Stiehl Rebecca Weber Yael Zarhy-Levo cognition Dave Collins Richard Ralley Ivani Santana classical guitar Dave Collins ChoreoSonic Stan Wijnans collaboration Ludivine Allegue Joel Luis Barbosa Johannes Birringer Elizabeth Boyce Simon Ellis Dave Everitt Sean Gregory Christopher Jones Colin Poole Sita Popat Alec Robertson Ross Varney Sarah Whatley Robert Wilsmore code-breaking Matthew C. Applegate Clemente Fracassi Bernhard Kuhn cliques Alec Robertson clowning Louise Peacock clowns David Robb club culture Alice Bayliss Nicolas Villar Clytemnestra Anastasia Belina comedy Emma Bennett Braínne Edge David Haldane Lawrence James MacDonald Peter Marteinson Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen Karen Morden Mary Oliver Chris Ritchie David Robb Ruth Shade Yuji Sone Alex Symons comedy studies Claire Pamment comic books ROGER SABIN commedia dellarte Rob Conkie Commission for Community Music Activity Marie McCarthy communication Lee Higgins Martha Ladly Leigh Landy Sudesh Mantillake Gong Zhifang community Christopher J Alfano Cindy L. Bell Sheelagh Chadwick Freda Chapple Mary L. Cohen Gillian Harrison Lee Higgins Eri Hirabayashi Deborah Kapchan Mary Copland Kennedy Katja Krebs Nathan B. Kruse Martha Ladly Thomas Langston Mary A. Leglar Mogomme Masoga Derek Miller Devora Neumark Debbie Rohwer David S. Smith Naphtaly Shem Tov Janice Waldron Susan West Amanda Williamson community art Theodore Stickley community education Xu Ruisen community groups Helen Turner community music Frank Abrahams Cathy Augustin Stephen Baranski Brydie-Leigh Bartleet Sarah J. Bartolome Jane Bentley Patricia Shehan Campbell Sylvia Chong Bruce Cole William M Dabback Kathryn Deane John Drummond David Elliott Steve Garrett Casey J. Hayes Dawn Joseph Tim Joss Sidsel Karlsen Andrew Krikun Thomas Langston Gica Loening Chee-Hoo Lum Sun Luyi Marie McCarthy Nikki Moran Rod Paton Ross W. Prior Mark Rohwer Xu Ruisen Julie Tiernan Kari Veblen Richard J. Hand Allan Hewitt Martin Iddon Rod Paton computational aesthetics Michael Takeo Magruder computational musicology David Plans computer architecture John T. O’Donnell computer game theory Tony Richards community theatre Frances Rifkin computer graphics George Gagneré Christian Jacquemin community-based theatre Baz Kershaw computer music Adam Stansbie Company Christine Young-Gerber computer programming Dave Everitt Dave Moore comparative drama Elizabeth Sakellaridou competition Kristen Rudisill Yuji Sone complex systems Jeffrey Johnson Sophia Lycouris computer science Cordelia V. Hall computer speech Alistair Edwards Christopher Newell computer systems John T. O’Donnell complexity theory Karen Cham Brian Curson Robyn Stuart computer-generated Alistair D. N. Edwards composed theatre David Roesner composition Peter Amsel Paul Carr computing audience Glorianna Davenport Hugo Liu concept musical Natalie Draper Christine Young-Gerber concept of the self Ian Lamond contemporary Shakespeare Neal Swettenham costume design Adele Keeley conferences Kathryn Deane contemporary theatre Claire Conceison counterculture Vagelis Siropoulos conflict resolution Alexandra Balandina Keren Barzilay-Shechter contemporary theory Anthony Fothergill counter-tenor Jorge Balça conformity Anthony Bushard contextual performance practices Thecla Schiphorst craft Deborah Barkun Jools Gilson-Ellis consciousness studies Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe contextualization Lim Swee Hong creative education Gillian Howell conservatoire Sean Gregory contingent learning Andrew King Paul Vickers creative process Phillip McIntyre consultation Mike White contemporary art Tracey Warr contemporary arts Paul J. C. M Franssen Markos Hadjioannou Martin Iddon Daniel Mroz David Roesner Greg Scheer Aleks Sierz Jackie Smart Kathy Smith Carole-Anne Upton Rebecca Weber contemporary dance Jennifer-Lynn Crawford contemporary drama Mary Luckhurst contemporary performance Liz Tomlin contemporary readings Broderick D. V. Chow continuous improvement David Francis copyright Thy Phu Coranto Necla Çikigil corporate theatre Susan Russell corporeality Ludivine Allegue Sarah T. Ellis Ross Varney Sarah Whatley correctional education Eric Shieh cosmic adventure Sally Jane Norman costume Jane Collins creative processes John Freeman creative writing Matthew Bushell Mary Luckhurst creative writing therapeutic writing Kate Evans creativity Peter Amsel Jane Bacon David Elliott Kate Evans LaResse Harvey Allan Hewitt Hilda Ho Meade Palidofsky Scott Palmer Angela Piccini Sita Popat Karen Richard Olivia Sagan Lim Swee Hong Julia Winterson creativity and compositional processes of composers Michael Dunn critical pedagogy Frank Abrahams Eric Shieh cross-cultural studies Alexandra Kertz-Welzel Laurence Raw Kari Veblen Richard Wallis culture Alexandra Balandina J. Bryan Burton Patricia Shehan Campbell Sheelagh Chadwick Glorianna Davenport Zachary Dunbar Dawn Joseph Mary Copland Kennedy Lone Koefoed Hansen Hugo Liu Sudesh Mantillake Sally Jane Norman Elizabeth Oehrle Helen Phelan Duška Radosavljević Kerrie Schaefer Simon Weaver Clare Parfitt-Brown Sita Popat Stamatia Portanova Bill Ribbans George Rodosthenous Douglas Rosenberg Sasha Roubicek Kristen Rudisill Pamyla A. Stiehl Robyn Stuart Lib Taylor Ross Varney Anna Vidali Adriane Vieira Rebecca Weber Sarah Whatley Stacy Wolf Yael Zarhy-Levo cross-national survey Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart curating Erica E. Ander Anne Lanceley dance aesthetics Ray Miller cult Brigid Cherry curriculum Giselle M. d. S Ferreira cultural geography BRETT LASHUA cybernetics Alan Peacock dance pedagogy Karryn Allen Becky Dyer cultural heritage management Sudesh Mantillake Cyprus Dorinda Hulton dance science Kimberley Hutt cultural history Anthony Fothergill Dafora Pamyla A. Stiehl dance theatre Vanio Papadelli cultural identity Chukwuma Okoye dance Helen Bailey Henrietta Bannerman Vasso Barboussi Glenna Batson Harmony Bench Johannes Birringer Yvon Bonenfant Erin Brannigan Pauline Brooks Roger Clegg Katye Coe Stefanie Cohen Brian Curson Scott deLahunta Sylvie Fortin Sue Hawksley Suna Imre Jamie Jewett Katja Kolcio Petra Kuppers Ian Lamond Sudesh Mantillake Joe Moran Scott Palmer dance therapy Nancy Beardall Kimberley Hutt Sandra Reeve critical theory Simon Biggs Douglas Rosenberg cross-art form Helen Turner cultural piracy Emer O’Toole cultural roles of sound Daniël Ploeger cultural studies Alison Phipps Elizabeth Sakellaridou cultural translation David G. Hebert dance education Rebecca Weber dance training Jess Allen dance writing Rosemary Lee dark play Claire Hind David Henry Hwang Hilary Baker Jeffrey Ullom David Leveaux Jessica Hillman David Walliams Sue Becker Lloyd Peters death Paul G. Dempster deconstruction Geraldine Harris defamiliarization Elise Morrison Lib Taylor definitions Lee Higgins Deleuze Erin Brannigan deliberation Philipp Dorstewitz Cathy Turner Sarah Whatley diaspora Graham Ley digital music David Plans Dick Van Dyke Chris Ritchie digital scenography Brian Curson George Gagneré Robyn Stuart Dickens Benjamin Poore didactic design Jesús Tejada Dido and Aeneas David Roesner digital arts Helen Bailey Camille Baker Simon Biggs Johannes Birringer Steve Dixon Markos Hadjioannou Adele Keeley Mary Oliver depression Kate Evans digital culture Simon Biggs Jaime del Val Esther MacCallum-Stewart Jacquelyn Ford Morie Thecla Schiphorst Derrida Jem Kelly design Stacey Pitsillides design process Joslin McKinney Mick Wallis devised theatre John Bennett Robert Jude Daniels Daniel Mroz Jackie Smart dialogue Fiona Bannon Necla Çikigil Devora Neumark digital death Stacey Pitsillides digital heritage Stacey Pitsillides digital media Helen Bailey Camille Baker Deborah Barkun Marsha Berry Tom Burvill Karen Cham Costas Constandinides Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Jools Gilson-Ellis Dermott Mcmeel Stamatia Portanova Thecla Schiphorst Ross Varney Dionysus Zachary Dunbar Dionysus in 69 Zachary Dunbar directing Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Helena Enright Bryce Lease Sol B. River Stephen Rothman Rob Smith Mark Taylor-Batty director Phillip Zarrilli disability Andrew Head James MacDonald Floyd Scott Taylor Ashley Thorpe Brenda Winter disability arts Bruce Cole disappointment Ewa Mazierska discourse analysis Roger Mantie disillusionment Paul J. C. M Franssen Disney David Allen Chris Ritchie Kristen Rudisill Graham Wood disorientation Steve Dixon displacement James MacDonald Devora Neumark Lib Taylor dispossession Nicholas Pagan disrupted language Geraldine Harris distance education Sun Luyi distractive interventions Sue Hacking DMT Dita Judith Federman documentary Camille Baker Julia Lippert Phillip McIntyre Derek Paget Sol B. River Carole-Anne Upton Rand Hazou Hilda Ho Jozefina Komporaly Julia Lippert Hod Orkibi Karen Richard Jackie Smart Katalin Trencsényi Roger Wooster Drama studies Márta Minier dramatic theory Ellen Marie Peck dramaturg Sarah Dickenson Helen Freshwater dramaturgy Dorinda Hulton David Lane Bryce Lease Michael Pinchbeck Duška Radosavljević Jackie Smart Phil Smith Katalin Trencsényi Cathy Turner dream Gordon McDougall Drury Lane Helen Brooks documentation Tom Burvill Graham Ley dubbing Olaf Jubin doppelgänger Costas Constandinides Dracula Benjamin Poore drama Jodie Allinson Tom Cantrell Brian Crow Anne Fenech Michael Fry Sarah Goldingay LaResse Harvey dyskinesia Debbie Green Clare Park early American theatre John S. Bak early childhood Helena Rodrigues early music Reba Wissner East European diaspora James MacDonald Eastern performance techniques Paul Allain Frances Barbe Eco Sarah O'Brien ecological performance Sandra Reeve ecology Anna Harpin economy of regard John Keefe Edna Ferber Bethany Wood education Kirstin Anderson Stephen Baranski Joel Luis Barbosa Brydie-Leigh Bartleet Cindy L. Bell Carola Boehm Andy Brader Helen J. Chatterjee Sylvia Chong Martha Eddy David G. Hebert Evangelos Himonides Patrick M. Jones Sidsel Karlsen Jozefina Komporaly Roc Lee Maria Mendona David E. Myers Elizabeth Oehrle Katie Overy Jane E. Southcott Roger Wooster Gong Zhifang educational technology Eddy K. M. Chong Edward Bond David Allen Kate Katafiasz Graham Saunders effective presentations Necla Çikigil effigy Jason Fitzgerald Einstürzende Neubauten Jennifer Shryane Elaine Summers Rebecca Loukes electric light Birgit Wiens electroacoustic music Leigh Landy Adrian Moore electronic editions Doug Reside electronic literature Simon Biggs Elvera Voth Mary L. Cohen empowerment Meade Palidofsky embodied knowing Joslin McKinney Vida. L. Midgelow Mick Wallis engagement Andrew Brown Steve Dillon Anne Fenech Jane E. Southcott embodiment Kevin Brown Roy Connolly Jaime del Val Rea Dennis Peter Harrop Katja Kolcio Petra Kuppers Graham Ley Roger Palmer Clare Parfitt-Brown Gretchen Schiller Thecla Schiphorst Mark Cariston Seton Elizabeth Smears Melissa Trimingham Danielle Wilde emergence Brian Curson Dave Everitt Alec Robertson David Roesner Robyn Stuart électronique Tim Stephenson emotion Yvon Bonenfant Roy Connolly Michael J. Lowis Richard Ralley Olivia Sagan Elementary Musicianship Orly Krasner emotion in performance Eric T. Hetzler Elizabeth I Rachel O’Riordan empathy Dita Judith Federman John Keefe Elizabethan apprenticeship David Fallow Elsa Gindler Rebecca Loukes Elton John Jeffrey Ullom empire Dimple Godiwala employability Roy Priest England James Harris English Restoration Theatre Tim Keenan ensemble Andrew Brown Steve Dillon entertainment Millie Taylor environment Matt Smith epistemology Peter Marteinson equal rights Casey J. Hayes essay film Mike Ingham estates Laurence Senelick ethics George Belliveau Tom Burvill Patrick Duggan Mark Cariston Seton Ruth Shade Carole-Anne Upton Vincent White ethnic studies George Belliveau David G. Hebert Jessica Hillman Tiel Lundy Vincent White experimental music Jennifer Shryane felt sense Jane Bacon experimental performance Yoshiko Fukushima female comedians Ruth Shade expressive arts Keren Barzilay-Shechter female culture Bethany Wood ethnomusicology Alexandra Balandina expressive arts therapies Mitchell Kossak Femi Osofisan Awo Mana Asiedu Euripides Sarah Jane Dickenson extended presence Stefanie Kuhn European theatre Bryce Lease Szabolcs Musca facilitation Teresa A Fisher David Francis Sean Gregory feminism Melissa Blanco Borelli Ana Gabriela Macedo Kathy Smith Elizabeth L. Wollman Malcolm Womack ethnocentricity Emer O’Toole ethnographic approaches to music research Sara Cohen European Union Laura Farrell-Wortman evangelical Greg Scheer Evans Chan Mike Ingham Every Good Boy Deserves Favour Mary Jo Lodge factory translation John Milton failure Elizabeth Boyce Michael Dunn Simon Ellis Michael Pinchbeck Colin Poole family Laurence Senelick evolution Paul Granjon fan culture Brigid Cherry exoticism Paul Allain Frances Barbe fanzines BRETT LASHUA experience Yvon Bonenfant farce Benjamin Poore experiential learning Roy Priest Feldenkrais Method Sylvie Fortin Adriane Vieira experiment Michael J. Lowis fellowship Thomas Langston Ferzan Ozpetek Alberto Zambenedetti Festen Yvonne Griggs festivals Sidsel Karlsen Naphtaly Shem Tov Fiddler on the Roof Jessica Hillman fidelity Alain Wolf film Melissa Blanco Borelli Erin Brannigan Andrew Head Claudia Kappenberg Bernhard Kuhn Stamatia Portanova Sol B. River Douglas Rosenberg Jesse Schlotterbeck film adaptation Thomas Leitch film score Anthony Bushard film studies Thomas Leitch Tiel Lundy Laurence Raw Film Studies Madhuja Mukherjee film theory Serena Gaurracino Markos Hadjioannou fin-de-siecle European theatre Teresa Murjas fine art Hilary Kneale first person Glenna Batson flash mob Thea Brejzek flow Adam J. Ledger Flower Drum Song Kathryn Edney fluxus Carl Lavery folklore Anna Harpin forensic psychiatry Hilda Ho Karen Richard form Angelos Koutsourakis Foucault Sylvie Fortin Dimple Godiwala Roger Mantie Adriane Vieira games Claire Hind Simon Lock Esther MacCallum-Stewart Axel Stockburger fragmentation Lib Taylor Francesco Cavalli Reba Wissner Francophobia Hsin-yun Ou francophone theatre Carole-Anne Upton Frank Zappa Paul Carr Richard J. Hand free writing Kate Evans freeze-frame Steve Dixon Friml William A. Everett frozen performance Susan Russell 'Fun Fiddle' Gica Loening Gao Xingjian Claire Conceison Garrick Hsin-yun Ou Gary Mitchell Tim Miles gender Sharon Lockyer Hod Orkibi Andrew Wyllie gender and cultural studies Serena Gaurracino gender and identity Lisa Colton gender studies Dimple Godiwala Casey J. Hayes Pamela Karantonis David Haldane Lawrence Esther MacCallum-Stewart Helena Rodrigues Elizabeth Sakellaridou Ruth Shade Jessica Sternfeld Elizabeth L. Wollman Bethany Wood futurism Gunter Berghaus generative Andrew Brown Steve Dillon Gadamer Henrietta Bannerman Galliard Necla Çikigil gamelan Maria Mendona genetic co-evolution David Plans genetic information Jane Coad genre Deborah Cartmell Yvonne Griggs Jeremy Strong Goderich Celtic College Janice Waldron groove Rowan Oliver geography Lone Koefoed Hansen Sarah Rubidge Goldfrapp Rowan Oliver grotesque James MacDonald Gopal Baratham Stephen Fernandez Daniel Jernigan Russell Pensyl Lee Shangping group Dita Judith Federman German Hörspiel Elke Huwiler German theatre Meg Mumford German-language musical market Olaf Jubin Germany Alexandra Kertz-Welzel gerontology Don D. Coffman Peter De Vries Gesamtkunstwerk Pamyla A. Stiehl gospel Benjamin J. Harbert Gothic Benjamin Poore Gothic aesthetic Brigid Cherry governance Gbemisola Adeoti graduate studies Robert Shaughnessy group psychotherapy Keren Barzilay-Shechter group singing Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift Gumshoe Tony Moon gynaecology Anne Lanceley Usha Menon habit Sima Belmar Graham-based technique Henrietta Bannerman Hammons family of West Virginia Leila Ryland Swain Gianni Amelio Alberto Zambenedetti graph of desire Kate Katafiasz Hans Spialek Paul Christman Gilles Deleuze Anton Pujol graphic design research methods Russ Bestley hara Sasha Roubicek gesture Ludivine Allegue Darren Tunstall globalization Laura Farrell-Wortman David G. Hebert Goat Island Robert Wilsmore Godber John Bennett Great Britain Tim Joss Greece Vasso Barboussi Anna Vidali Gregor Mendel David Allen Hardy Michael Fry Harold Pinter Yael Zarhy-Levo haunted stage John Staniunas HCI Nick Bryan-Kinns Paul Granjon healing Mogomme Masoga Meade Palidofsky healing and development Hazel Barnes health Erica E. Ander Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift Jane Coad Sylvie Fortin Chee-Hoo Lum Jacquelyn Ford Morie Linda J. Thomson Adriane Vieira Mike White Roger Wooster health sciences Theodore Stickley heart Amanda Williamson hegemony Franc Chamberlain Hellman William A. Everett Henri Bergson Tim Miles Henry Carey Jennifer Cable Henry Harris David Roberts Henry James Sarah Artt Henry Purcell Jennifer Cable heritage Erica E. Ander Anna Harpin BRETT LASHUA heteroglossia Richard Berger High School Musical Kristen Rudisill Holocaust Rachel Weissbrod Holocaust representation Teresa Murjas homosexuality John M. Clum Casey J. Hayes David Haldane Lawrence Bryce Lease Elizabeth L. Wollman higher education Carola Boehm Hijikata Petra Kuppers Hirata Oriza Tim Keenan Hong Kong Mike Ingham horror Brigid Cherry Thy Phu Sarah Thomas historical dances Necla Çikigil horror studies Steffen Hantke historical harp Chelcy Bowles history Vincent L. Barnett Zachary Dunbar Gillian Harrison Lee Higgins Alexandra Kertz-Welzel Andrew Krikun Roc Lee Mary A. Leglar Graham Ley Julia Lippert Rachel O’Riordan David S. Smith history of somatic practices Rebecca Loukes HIV/AIDS Katharine Low Hollywood Melissa Blanco Borelli Laurence Raw Sarah Thomas hospital Erica E. Ander Hotei Jerri Daboo Hotel Pro Porma David Fenton Howard Barker Sarah Goldingay Hugh Grant Chris Ritchie Hugh Martin Paul Christman human body Daniël Ploeger human intelligence Katja Münker human-computer interaction Sama'a Al Hashimi Paul Cairns Alistair D. N. Edwards Stefanie Kuhn human–computer interaction Adrian Moore Thecla Schiphorst humanities computing Doug Reside image schemata Marie Louise Bourbeau Geoffrey Edwards imagination Jane Bacon imitation Kennedy C. Chinyowa immersion Ivani Santana humour Tim Miles Simon Weaver impersonation Pamela Karantonis humour theory Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen Brett Mills hypermasculinity Helen Ostovich hyper-physical interfaces Alice Bayliss Jennifer G. Sheridan Nicolas Villar identity William M Dabback Glorianna Davenport Jason Fitzgerald Eri Hirabayashi Dawn Joseph Katja Kolcio Ian Lamond Hugo Liu Karen Morden Olivia Sagan Judith Sebesta Lim Swee Hong informal learning Miikka Salavuo informal transmission Leila Ryland Swain information Jonathan Foster information design Russ Bestley improvisation Ann Cooper Albright Stephen Baranski Vasso Barboussi Rea Dennis Braínne Edge Frank Millward Katja Münker Rod Paton Jonathan Savage Anna Vidali informed consent Teresa A Fisher incidental music David Roesner inhibition Sima Belmar inclusion Valentina Iadeluca Andrea Sangiorgio injuries Bill Ribbans incongruity Matthew Saxton Ian Wilkie illegitimacy Rachel Carroll improving practice Steve Cooper ideologem James Reynolds indoor playhouse Mark Hutchings information architecture Gabriella Giannachi Duncan Rowland ideology Alain Wolf implied meaning Alain Wolf individuality Ben Francombe independent learning Steve Cooper India Kristen Rudisill Ingmar Bergman Steve Waters inhabitation Andrew Filmer inner voices George Belliveau Vincent White installation Ludivine Allegue Philip Auslander Sue Hawksley Stewart Kember Scott Palmer Daniël Ploeger instrumental music education Joel Luis Barbosa Don D. Coffman integration Sarah T. Ellis Kate Napier intelligent accompaniment Mehmet Vurkaç intention Glenna Batson interaction Simon Lock Victor I. Ukaegbu Alan Peacock Duncan Rowland Ivani Santana Gretchen Schiller Elizabeth Swift Ross Varney Sarah Whatley Danielle Wilde Julie Wilson-Bokowiec interarts David Roesner inter-corporeality Mark Cariston Seton intercultural exchange Meg Mumford interactive art Steve Benford Karen Cham Jonathan Foster Gretchen Schiller Axel Stockburger intercultural performance Claire Conceison interactive arts Xenia Pestova intercultural theatre Emer O’Toole interactive media Simon Biggs Scott Palmer Sita Popat interculturalism Ming-yan Lai Stella Sorby interactive performance Carol Brown interactive works Stephen Greer intercultural studies Alison Phipps interdisciplinarity Carola Boehm Franc Chamberlain Robert Jude Daniels Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Joslin McKinney Mick Wallis interface Mary Oliver intermediality David Fenton Markos Hadjioannou Bernhard Kuhn David Roesner internet Hugh Brown Dave Everitt Martha Ladly Leigh Landy Esther MacCallum-Stewart Toni Sant Jonathan Savage Janice Waldron Internet Philip Auslander Denise Doyle Jason Freeman interpretation Cristina Cano Vara Kara McKechnie intersemiotic Rachel Weissbrod intertextuality Costas Constandinides Yvonne Griggs Geraldine Harris Ana Gabriela Macedo Jeremy Strong interval Mark Hutchings interactivity Sama'a Al Hashimi Awo Mana Asiedu Nick Bryan-Kinns Jaime del Val Scott deLahunta Anna Fenemore Jason Freeman Gabriella Giannachi Sue Hawksley Jamie Jewett Jeffrey Johnson Jem Kelly Sophia Lycouris Clare Parfitt-Brown interdisciplinary frameworks Ben Macpherson interview Suna Imre Interet Harmony Bench intimate musical Melodie G Galloway inter-ethnic relationships Alexandra Balandina involvement Thomas Langston iPod Steve Cooper Ireland Laura Farrell-Wortman Helen Phelan Julie Tiernan Irish criticism Márta Minier Irish dance Laura Farrell-Wortman Irish music Chelcy Bowles Japan David G. Hebert Eri Hirabayashi Yuji Sone Japanese comedy Yoshiko Fukushima Japanese folk song Mari Shiobara Japanese literature and film Barbara Thornbury Jason Robert Brown Doug Reside Joseph Conrad Anthony Fothergill Joseph Losey Yael Zarhy-Levo Juanita Hall Kathryn Edney jukebox musicals Jeffrey Ullom Jumbo Geoffrey Block juvenile offenders Vuyisile Mathiti Carol J. Oja Julia Sloth-Nielsen Sheila C. Woodward Irish theatre Brenda Winter jazz Benjamin J. Harbert Irish traditional music Janice Waldron Jeanine Tesori Aaron C. Thomas ISME Marie McCarthy jewellery Jo Pond Kant Sarah O'Brien Israeli – Palestinian youth Keren Barzilay-Shechter Jewish studies Garrett Eisler Derek Miller Karl Marx Rick Mitchell Israeli theatre Naphtaly Shem Tov ISTA Adam J. Ledger Italian cinema Alberto Zambenedetti Italian futurism Gunter Berghaus James Lacy Helen Brooks Jane Austen Deborah Cartmell Jeremy Strong Kandyan dance Sudesh Mantillake jingju Megan Evans Karl Valentin Michael Wilson Joan Davis Emma Meehan Kathakali Paul Allain Frances Barbe Joan Rivers Sharon Lockyer Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen Brett Mills jo-ha-kyu Yasutaka Maruki Jonathan Larson Elizabeth Titrington Craft keyboard Robert Meffe kinaesthesis Gretchen Schiller kinesthetic ability Dita Judith Federman King Lear Yvonne Griggs King Oedipus Jodie Allinson Rob Smith knitting Deborah Barkun Jools Gilson-Ellis knowing complicity John Keefe knowledge transfer Paul Draper Koothu Madom Sreedevi K. Nair Krapps Last Tape Andrew Head la volta Necla Çikigil Lacan Kate Katafiasz language Ian McFadyen Floyd Scott Taylor Lars von Trier Angelos Koutsourakis laughter Peter Marteinson Laura Harvey Yuko Kurahashi Laurence Sterne Eckart Voigts-Virchow law Vuyisile Mathiti Julia Sloth-Nielsen Sheila C. Woodward Le Hot Club du Cinq Robert Shaughnessy Le nozze di Figaro Ben Curry lifelong learning Don D. Coffman Patrick M. Jones David E. Myers Mark Rohwer Rineke Smilde lifelong music-making Roger Mantie learning Mary Copland Kennedy Hannele Weir lifespan Patrick M. Jones learning dynamics Brydie-Leigh Bartleet light Birgit Wiens learning technology Andrew King Paul Vickers liminal Kathy Smith leather industry David Fallow Lincoln's Inn Fields theatre 1661-1674 Tim Keenan Lecoq Darren Tunstall linguistics Floyd Scott Taylor Reba Wissner Lehman Engel Bryan M. Vandevender leisure Anne Fenech Leonard Bernstein Paul R. Laird Les Misérables Robert Meffe Let My People Come Elizabeth L. Wollman Liesl Karlstadt Oliver Double Michael Wilson life-long engagement Susan West literary censorship Veronika Schandl literary study David Chandler literature Ana Gabriela Macedo Little Britain Sue Becker Lloyd Peters liturgy Deborah Kapchan live art Pauline Brooks Grayson Cooke Robert Jude Daniels Sue Hawksley live arts Xenia Pestova machine Philip Auslander lived geographies Michael Carklin machine listening Mehmet Vurkaç lived inquiry Fiona Bannon Madonna Lucy O’Brien liveness Philip Auslander Kevin Brown Alistair D. N. Edwards Christopher Newell Matthew Reason Tim Stephenson make-believe Kennedy C. Chinyowa Liverpool BRETT LASHUA Mamma Mia! Malcolm Womack living body Stefanie Cohen mammy Aaron C. Thomas Lluïsa Cunillé Anton Pujol management Brian Crow locative media Marsha Berry Lone Koefoed Hansen Dermott Mcmeel Loewe Jennifer Oates Loïe Fuller Clare Parfitt-Brown London Fieldworks Tracey Warr Los Angeles theatre Stephen Rothman Louisiana Benjamin J. Harbert Lutuo Xiangzi Megan Evans male dancers George Rodosthenous Mantle of the Expert David Allen manuscript Violetta Kostka Maori Nancy Menning mapping Lone Koefoed Hansen Marco Ponti Alberto Zambenedetti Marisa Paredes Cristina Cano Vara marketing Helen Ferrara martial arts Leon Hunt Daniel Mroz Ashlee Ramsey Sasha Roubicek Martin Crimp Vicky Angelaki Mary Fulkerson Henrietta Bannerman masculine discourses Sharon Lockyer masculinity George Rodosthenous Jessica Sternfeld material culture Tiel Lundy material movability Birgit Wiens materiality John Keefe Matt Lucas Sue Becker Lloyd Peters Matthew Bourne Yael Zarhy-Levo Matthias Langhoff Yuko Kurahashi Medea Geraldine Harris media Jodie Allinson media criticism Michael Takeo Magruder media literacy Martin Barker media studies Andrew Head Jamie Jewett Susan Kozel Julia Lippert Axel Stockburger media theory Tony Richards mediation Sima Belmar mediatization Marsha Berry David Fenton Tim Stephenson mediatized Alistair D. N. Edwards medicine Theodore Stickley medicine sales Victor I. Ukaegbu medieval music Lisa Colton megamusical Vagelis Siropoulos memetics James Mooney memory Roy Connolly Rea Dennis Chee-Hoo Lum Richard Ralley Matthew Reason Linda J. Thomson Mitchell Kossak Jo Pond Karen Richard Nick Rowe Helen Turner mental illness Peter Amsel mental well-being Kate Evans mentally disordered offenders Hilda Ho Karen Richard mentors Vuyisile Mathiti Julia Sloth-Nielsen Sheila C. Woodward Meredith Willson Roberta Freund Schwartz John Staniunas Merleau-Ponty Jem Kelly meta-audience Glorianna Davenport Hugo Liu metacommunication Kennedy C. Chinyowa metadata Steve Benford Jonathan Foster Gabriella Giannachi Duncan Rowland metaverse Jacquelyn Ford Morie methodical practice Fiona Bannon Methodism Albert Jewell Methodist Lim Swee Hong methodology Jane Bacon Keren Barzilay-Shechter Matthew Reason Michael Bennett Zachary Dunbar Michael Boyd Yuko Kurahashi Michael Chekhov Jerri Daboo Michael Winterbottom Eckart Voigts-Virchow microphones Tracey Moore Middletons politics Mark Hutchings mimesis David Fenton metadrama Natalie Draper ministry Michael I. Jackson Meng Jinghui Claire Conceison metafiction Eckart Voigts-Virchow mise-en-scene Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic mental health Jane Bentley Sue Hacking Hilda Ho metatheatre Angela Piccini Jenn Stephenson mise-en-scène Sarah Artt mixed media Marco Grosoli monodrama Kurt Taroff multiculturalism Dawn Joseph mixed reality Jonathan Foster monographs Liz Tomlin multi-disciplinary healthcare Bill Ribbans mixed reality performance Steve Benford Gabriella Giannachi moral controversies Martin Barker Morecambe Stephen Baranski multimedia Johannes Birringer Andy Brader Grayson Cooke Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Jennifer Parker-Starbuck motherhood Helena Rodrigues multimedia art Frank Millward motion tracking Stefanie Kuhn multimedia performance Helen Ostovich movement Melissa Blanco Borelli Suna Imre Clare Park Stamatia Portanova Ivani Santana Gretchen Schiller Lib Taylor multimediality Márta Minier MMORPGs Esther MacCallum-Stewart Toni Sant mobile media Camille Baker Alan Peacock Mod Donna Elizabeth L. Wollman modern drama Nicholas Pagan Modern Japanese Theatre Tim Keenan modern languages Alison Phipps modern literature Anthony Fothergill modernism James Mooney Darren Tunstall movement art Sandra Reeve movement teaching Vanio Papadelli movement therapist Nancy Beardall moving-image works Polly Hudson modernity Rick Mitchell modularity Birgit Wiens monitors Tracey Moore Mozart Ben Curry Mr. Saturday Night Tony Moon mulatta body Melissa Blanco Borelli multimodal interaction Nick Bryan-Kinns multi-modality Geoffrey Edwards multi-sited fieldwork Susanne Ravn Munich cabaret Oliver Double Michael Wilson Munro Kathy Smith museum Hannele Weir music Fadi Mohammad AlGhawanmeh M. T Al-Ghawanmeh Kirstin Anderson Cathy Augustin Joel Luis Barbosa Cindy L. Bell Johannes Birringer Andy Brader Larry Brewster Nick Bryan-Kinns Paul Carr Paul Christman Ben Curry Jason Freeman Rami Haddad Richard J. Hand Gillian Harrison LaResse Harvey C. Michael Hawn Allan Hewitt Lee Higgins Evangelos Himonides Eri Hirabayashi Patrick M. Jones Christopher Jones Tim Joss Sidsel Karlsen Andrew King Nathan B. Kruse Roc Lee Mary A. Leglar Michael J. Lowis Mogomme Masoga Maria Mendona David E. Myers Jennifer Oates Elizabeth Oehrle Katie Overy Roger Palmer Roger Palmer Mary E. Piercey David Roesner Debbie Rohwer Greg Scheer Rineke Smilde David S. Smith Stella Sorby John Staniunas Kurt Taroff Katalin Trencsényi Kari Veblen Paul Vickers Janice Waldron Julia Winterson Stacy Wolf Gong Zhifang music education Stephen Baranski music 2.0 Paul Draper music education Frank Abrahams Sarah J. Bartolome Chelcy Bowles Pamela Burnard J. Bryan Burton Jeffrey E. Bush Patricia Shehan Campbell Eddy K. M. Chong David Elliott Cordelia V. Hall Valentina Iadeluca Phil R. Kirkman Roger Mantie Vuyisile Mathiti Nikki Moran Miikka Salavuo Andrea Sangiorgio Eric Shieh Mari Shiobara Julia Sloth-Nielsen Mehmet Vurkaç Susan West Sheila C. Woodward music festivals Alexandra Balandina music information research Mehmet Vurkaç music production Matthew C. Applegate music technology Joseph Anderson Carola Boehm Paul Draper Giselle M. d. S Ferreira Adrian Moore Dave Moore Roy Priest Jonathan Savage music theatre Dominic Symonds music theory Mehmet Vurkaç music therapy Rod Paton musical comedy John S. Bak musical cultures Phil R. Kirkman Musical Futures project Kari Veblen musical stage Dominic Symonds musical theatre Siân Adiseshiah Anthony Bushard Elizabeth Titrington Craft Garrett Eisler Jessica Hillman Orly Krasner Ray Miller Tracey Moore Madhuja Mukherjee Kate Napier George Rodosthenous Pamyla A. Stiehl Millie Taylor musical theatre history Ellen Marie Peck musicals Sarah T. Ellis Paul R. Laird Deirdre Osborne Roberta Freund Schwartz Stella Sorby Malcolm Womack musicals and opera Pamela Karantonis musicals of the 1930s Geoffrey Block musicology Martin Iddon Muslim studies André de Quadros Musowiki Hugh Brown mystery Sarah Thomas mythogeography Phil Smith narrative Paul Carr Richard J. Hand Jo Pond Stuart Price Neal Swettenham Elizabeth Swift Steve Dillon narratology Elke Huwiler National Curriculum Phil R. Kirkman national identity Elizabeth Titrington Craft nationalism John S. Bak Graeme Harper Native American literature Dennis Cutchins Native Americans J. Bryan Burton natural environment Paula Kramer Nay Fadi Mohammad AlGhawanmeh M. T Al-Ghawanmeh Rami Haddad Nazism Oliver Double neoclassicism Violetta Kostka Hsin-yun Ou neotonality Violetta Kostka neo-Victorian Rachel Carroll networking Marsha Berry Andrew Brown neuroscience Glenna Batson Anne Fenech Floyd Scott Taylor New Deal Andrew Krikun Nigeria Gbemisola Adeoti non-diegetic Rob Dean nonlinear systems Frank Millward new feminism Lucy O’Brien nonsense Matthew Saxton Ian Wilkie new instrument design Jonathan Savage non-verbal communication Darren Tunstall new media Simon Biggs Marie Louise Bourbeau Hugh Brown Grayson Cooke Geoffrey Edwards George Gagneré Markos Hadjioannou Christian Jacquemin Martha Ladly Simon Lock Northern Ireland Tim Miles Carole-Anne Upton new writing David Lane Aleks Sierz nostalgia Siân Adiseshiah nostalgic theatre Siân Adiseshiah Not I Mark Taylor-Batty New Zealand David G. Hebert Nancy Menning Roger Palmer notional audience Sreedevi K. Nair Ngati Toa John Drummond Nick Philippou Yuko Kurahashi Nietzsche Zachary Dunbar Nietzschean ethics Markos Hadjioannou Nunavut Mary E. Piercey nursing Anne Lanceley object Melissa Trimingham object handling Helen J. Chatterjee offensive humour Simon Weaver off-stage performance Glorianna Davenport Hugo Liu Open University Xu Ruisen outreach Julia Winterson painting Ludivine Allegue opera Ben Curry Violetta Kostka Bernhard Kuhn Oklahoma! Kurt Jensen Derek Miller opera production Jorge Balça Oh! Calcutta! Elizabeth L. Wollman old time radio Sarah Thomas older adults William M Dabback older people Hilary Bungay Stephen Clift Olimpias Petra Kuppers One Reed Theatre Ensemble Daniel Mroz opera training Jorge Balça operatic productions John M. Clum oral tradition C. Michael Hawn orality Mary Noonan orchestra Duane Warfield Julia Winterson online culture Hugh Brown Jason Freeman Esther MacCallum-Stewart Miikka Salavuo Oresteia Anastasia Belina online learning Leigh Landy ontology Marco Grosoli Markos Hadjioannou Graeme Harper Peter Marteinson Adam Stansbie Orff-Schulwerk Valentina Iadeluca Andrea Sangiorgio original music Gillian Howell orthopaedics Bill Ribbans open education Giselle M. d. S Ferreira Oscar Hammerstein II Kurt Jensen Graham Wood open form Jason Freeman outdoor arts Robert Jude Daniels pantomime Millie Taylor Parade Doug Reside paradox Kennedy C. Chinyowa Paratextuality Cristina Cano Vara participation Sarah J. Bartolome Patricia Shehan Campbell Anna Fenemore Jason Freeman Gabriella Giannachi Matthew Reason Duncan Rowland Matt Smith Mike White pastoral Karen Morden patriarchy Dimple Godiwala Patti LuPone Jason Fitzgerald Paulo Freire Frank Abrahams pauses Alistair D. N. Edwards pavane Necla Çikigil peak experiences Michael J. Lowis pedagogy Ann Cooper Albright Pamela Burnard Sheelagh Chadwick Manny Emslie Peter Harrop Lisa Lewis Claire MacDonald Ray Miller Mike Pearson Laurence Raw Nick Rowe Jonathan Savage Ruth Way peer learning Christopher Jones Andrew King Peking opera Megan Evans perception Stamatia Portanova performance Sama'a Al Hashimi Jane Bacon Camille Baker Glenna Batson George Belliveau Johannes Birringer Marie Louise Bourbeau Thea Brejzek Kevin Brown Tom Burvill Necla Çikigil Jane Collins Grayson Cooke Peter De Vries Jaime del Val Rea Dennis Patrick Duggan Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Geoffrey Edwards Anna Fenemore Andrew Filmer Jonathan Foster Sarah Goldingay Paul Granjon Graeme Harper Geraldine Harris Peter Harrop Dee Heddon Claire Hind Ceri Hovland Karen Jurs-Munby Claudia Kappenberg Stewart Kember Stefanie Kuhn Lisa Lewis Simon Lock Claire MacDonald Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen Devora Neumark Rachel O’Riordan Peter O’Rourke Scott Palmer Jennifer Parker-Starbuck Alan Peacock Mike Pearson Helen Phelan Daniël Ploeger Sita Popat David Roesner Sarah Rubidge Kerrie Schaefer Ruth Shade Jennifer Shryane Kathy Smith Adam Stansbie Neal Swettenham Elizabeth Swift Mark Taylor-Batty Cathy Turner Victor I. Ukaegbu Ruth Way Rebecca Weber Vincent White Danielle Wilde Robert Wilsmore performance ecology Baz Kershaw performance education Paul Allain Frances Barbe performance installations Carol Brown performance making Nick Hunt performance research Alison Hodge performance strategy Ben Francombe performance studies Sima Belmar Yoshiko Fukushima Serena Gaurracino Mike Pearson Performance Studies Franc Chamberlain performance theory Liz Tomlin performances Sudesh Mantillake personal growth Jane E. Southcott Peter Cockett Helen Ostovich Peter Pan Tanya Ronder phenomenology Ann Cooper Albright Vicky Angelaki Dave Collins Robert Jude Daniels Peter De Vries Martha Ladly Susanne Ravn Adam Stansbie Jenn Stephenson philosophy Patrick Duggan David Elliott photography Jane Coad Debbie Green Ceri Hovland Clare Park Rachel Weissbrod physical comedy Garry Headland physical theatre Robert Jude Daniels Helen Freshwater John Keefe physicality Patrick Duggan Jennifer G. Sheridan physiotherapy Katja Münker piano Violetta Kostka Xenia Pestova piano performance Mari Shiobara Pina Bausch Meg Mumford pixel aesthetics Camille Baker place Katja Krebs plainsong Lisa Colton plasticity Adam Stansbie Plautus Rachel Kirk play Lizbeth Goodman Joslin McKinney Mick Wallis playful arenas Alice Bayliss Jennifer G. Sheridan Nicolas Villar playing videogames Paul Cairns playwriting David Lane Mary Noonan Cathy Turner Ian McFadyen pleasure Brett Mills political philosophy Broderick D. V. Chow Plymouth Richard Wallis political theatre Piet Defraeye Bryce Lease Graham Saunders PMLD Ian Lamond Pocahontas myth John S. Bak podcasting Steve Cooper Poème Tim Stephenson poetic methodology Alys Longley poetry Glenna Batson Emma Bennett Claire MacDonald Christopher McCullough David Ian Rabey Leila Ryland Swain poi Jennifer G. Sheridan point of view Ceri Hovland Poland Ewa Mazierska politics Larry Brewster Oliver Double Anna Harpin Naphtaly Shem Tov Michael Wilson Polynesia David G. Hebert pop culture ROGER SABIN pop messianism Vagelis Siropoulos pop music Stamatia Portanova popular culture John Bennett Pamela Karantonis Kristen Rudisill popular music Rob Smith popular performance Millie Taylor Polish film Teresa Murjas popular theatre Phil Smith Brenda Winter Polish theatre Teresa Murjas popular tradition Rob Conkie politeness strategies Gerard Matte porosity Derek Paget postwar British drama Aleks Sierz Practice-as-Research (PaR) Vida. L. Midgelow postcolonial literature Serena Gaurracino postwar Italian cinema (1945– 55) Bernhard Kuhn practice-based research Jonathan Foster Paula Kramer post-war suburbs Jessica Sternfeld practitioner Phillip McIntyre post-Yugoslav era Alexandra Balandina practitioner knowledge Rosemary Lee power Debbie Green Clare Park praise Greg Scheer postcolonial theatre Pedro de Senna postcolonial theory Emer O’Toole postcolonialism Chukwuma Okoye post-communism Ewa Mazierska post-dramatic theatre Karen Jurs-Munby post-impressionism Christopher McCullough postmodern body Kevin Brown postmodern dance Becky Dyer postmodernism Steve Dixon Lib Taylor post-modernism James Mooney postolonial discourse Ben Francombe post-structuralism Karen Cham Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder Stuart Price practical programming John T. O’Donnell practice Patrick Duggan Andrew Filmer Sidsel Karlsen Carl Lavery Sally Jane Norman Roger Palmer Helen Phelan Angela Piccini Ross W. Prior Hannele Weir Mike White practice and leadership Kathryn Deane practice as research Robert Jude Daniels Rosemary Lee Practice as Research (PaR) Jane Bacon practice theory Eri Hirabayashi practice-as-research Katja Krebs Teresa Murjas praxis intervention Paul Draper prayer C. Michael Hawn presence Kevin Brown Stefanie Kuhn presentation Lizbeth Goodman Pride and Prejudice Deborah Cartmell prison Kirstin Anderson Mary L. Cohen Joe Fierro Roc Lee Maria Mendona Katie Overy Helena Rodrigues Duane Warfield prison choir Mary L. Cohen prison choirs Nancy Menning prison education Bruce Cole prose narrative Michael Fry public space Elise Morrison problem Michael Pinchbeck protocol analysis Dave Collins publicity effects Vincent L. Barnett problem comedies Veronika Schandl psychoacoustics Evangelos Himonides publishing Kate Napier problem solving Andrew King Paul Vickers psychoanalysis Kathy Smith Pulavar Sreedevi K. Nair psychodrama Keren Barzilay-Shechter pulsation Yvon Bonenfant process analysis David Roesner psychodrama and dramatherapy Hod Orkibi punishment Eric Shieh processes Suna Imre psychogeography Lone Koefoed Hansen professional craft Andrew Filmer psychological Gunter Kreutz Don Stewart professional development Jeffrey E. Bush Elizabeth Smears psychological narrative Natalie Draper process Claire MacDonald professional identity Hod Orkibi programming Matthew C. Applegate projected image Nick Moran psychology Roy Connolly Kate Katafiasz Richard Ralley psychology. Robert Preston John Staniunas psychophysical Jerri Daboo prologue Reba Wissner propaganda Vincent L. Barnett Carol J. Oja property Laurence Senelick public art Helen Turner public ritual Phil Smith punk ROGER SABIN puppet Melissa Trimingham puppetry Matt Smith Pura Desa Adam J. Ledger quality perception Evangelos Himonides queer performance Stephen Greer queer theory Stephen Greer Andrew Wyllie R&B Benjamin J. Harbert race Melissa Blanco Borelli Larry Brewster Sheelagh Chadwick Kathryn Edney Dimple Godiwala Elizabeth Oehrle Deirdre Osborne Naphtaly Shem Tov Simon Weaver Andrew Wyllie racialized hips Melissa Blanco Borelli racism Sue Becker Lloyd Peters Judith A Sebesta radical socialism Paul J. C. M Franssen radical texts for performance Neal Swettenham radio art Matthew Barnard radio broadcasting in the United States Sarah Thomas radio drama Jesse Schlotterbeck Ramayana Sreedevi K. Nair Ray Chung Vanio Papadelli reading imagery Dorinda Hulton real Leon Hunt real time Ivani Santana realism Costas Constandinides reception Judith A Sebesta Reckless Sleepers Michael Pinchbeck recorder Roger Palmer recording Christopher Jones re-creation John Milton recusancy David Fallow recycling John Keefe reflective judgement Sarah O'Brien reflective learning Elizabeth Smears reflective practice Roy Priest reflective writing Jess Allen reflexive practice Karen Cham reflexivity Glenna Batson Glorianna Davenport Hugo Liu refugees Rand Hazou regional theatre Claire Cochrane rehabilitation Joe Fierro Maria Mendona rehabilitation support Matthew Bushell rehearsal strategies David Ian Rabey rehearsals David Roesner relational development Nancy Beardall relaxation Amanda Williamson release-based technique Jennifer-Lynn Crawford religion Jane Bentley Sarah Goldingay C. Michael Hawn Deborah Kapchan Rachel O’Riordan Helen Phelan Lim Swee Hong remediation Richard Berger Elise Morrison reminiscence therapy Chee-Hoo Lum Rent Elizabeth Titrington Craft repetition Kennedy C. Chinyowa Matthew Saxton Ian Wilkie replay Steve Benford Jonathan Foster Lizbeth Goodman Duncan Rowland representation John Milton re-presentation Lizbeth Goodman representations of Japan Thy Phu representations of the male George Rodosthenous reproduction Tim Stephenson research George Belliveau Steve Benford David G. Hebert Susan Kozel Roc Lee Roberta Mock Vincent White Brenda Winter research and theory Kathryn Deane resilience Don Stewart responsiveness Joslin McKinney Mick Wallis rest Glenna Batson revision Ana Gabriela Macedo revue Melodie G Galloway rewiring Richard Berger rhythm Mehmet Vurkaç Richard Foreman Neal Swettenham Richard Hornby Natalie Draper Richard Rodgers Kurt Jensen Graham Wood Richard Schechner Zachary Dunbar Richard Tarlton Roger Clegg ritual Eri Hirabayashi Mogomme Masoga Helen Phelan Lim Swee Hong riverboat Rick Mitchell Sita Popat rock music Bryan M. Vandevender Rodgers and Hammerstein Derek Miller Rodgers and Hart Geoffrey Block Paul Christman Rohmer Marco Grosoli Roma Richard Wallis romantic comedy Deborah Cartmell Jeremy Strong Romberg William A. Everett Rose's Turn Jason Fitzgerald Riverdance Laura Farrell-Wortman Judith Sebesta Rouben Mamoulian Kurt Jensen Robert Lepage Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Robert Siodmak Jesse Schlotterbeck Roberta Carreri Adam J. Ledger robotics Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Dermott Mcmeel Jennifer Parker-Starbuck Yuji Sone Stan Wijnans robotics design Scott Palmer Russia Vincent L. Barnett Russian drama Laurence Senelick Ruy Guerra Pedro de Senna Salad Days Siân Adiseshiah sales-performers Victor I. Ukaegbu sample Philip Auslander Scottish education Gica Loening self-writing Chukwuma Okoye Samuel Beckett Phillip Zarrilli screen Nick Moran Samuel Foote Roger Clegg screen adaptation Sarah Artt Santa Ana Joe Fierro screendance Claudia Kappenberg semiotics Ben Curry Elke Huwiler Bryce Lease Sudesh Mantillake Peter Marteinson Kara McKechnie Nicholas Pagan Alan Peacock Simon Weaver satire James Harris Violetta Kostka scriptwriting Sarah Jane Dickenson Sol B. River scenic modules Birgit Wiens scenography Thea Brejzek Jane Collins schema/schemata Sarah O'Brien schizophrenia Dorinda Hulton school music Patrick M. Jones Roger Mantie school projects Helena Enright schools Mary A. Leglar David S. Smith science fiction Esther MacCallum-Stewart Scotland Kirstin Anderson Jennifer Oates Katie Overy Scrubs Mary Jo Lodge SCUDD Roberta Mock sculpture Emma Bennett Second Life Denise Doyle Jacquelyn Ford Morie secularism Deborah Kapchan Seinendan Tim Keenan self Lizbeth Goodman self-deprecation Sharon Lockyer self-esteem Kirstin Anderson Larry Brewster Katie Overy semi-structured framework Rebecca Weber senior citizens Chee-Hoo Lum sensation Fiona Bannon senses Jennifer G. Sheridan sensing Alice Bayliss Susanne Ravn Nicolas Villar Sensorial Mediations Ashlee Ramsey servitude Ming-yan Lai set piece Garry Headland seventeenth century David Roberts seventeenth-century opera Reba Wissner sex Bryan M. Vandevender sexual health Katharine Low sexuality Melissa Blanco Borelli Dimple Godiwala Casey J. Hayes David Haldane Lawrence Sharon Lockyer Andrew Wyllie Shabbaba Fadi Mohammad AlGhawanmeh M. T Al-Ghawanmeh Rami Haddad Bethany Wood Shyamalan Rob Dean Sigmund Freud Tim Miles signal processing Adrian Moore small-scale musical Melodie G Galloway social being Peter Marteinson social capital Thomas Langston social care Jane Coad Paul G. Dempster signal-processing algorithms Joseph Anderson Shakespeare David Chandler Necla Çikigil David Fallow Paul J. C. M Franssen Yvonne Griggs Helen Ostovich Veronika Schandl Peter Thomson Darren Tunstall Elizabeth Zauderer Sikhism Brian Crow Simon Ellis Elizabeth Boyce singing Kate Napier Meade Palidofsky shamanism Victor I. Ukaegbu Shaw Benjamin Poore She Bop Lucy O’Brien Shenandoah Valley William M Dabback shifts of visual perception Birgit Wiens short fiction film Alberto Zambenedetti short film Katja Krebs Show Boat Judith Sebesta Sir Oswald Stoll Vincent L. Barnett site Dorinda Hulton site-specific performativity Lone Koefoed Hansen site-specificity Claudia Kappenberg situationism Carl Lavery Skinner Releasing Technique Manny Emslie Polly Hudson slapstick Louise Peacock social change Helen Ferrara social choreography Fiona Bannon social identity Christopher J Alfano social inclusion Nick Rowe social interaction William M Dabback Nikki Moran social justice Mary L. Cohen Casey J. Hayes social narratives Esther MacCallum-Stewart social network Thea Brejzek social networking Paul Draper Miikka Salavuo social planning Philipp Dorstewitz social reality Meg Mumford somatic(s) education Glenna Batson social science Sue Hacking somatics Ann Cooper Albright Henrietta Bannerman Vasso Barboussi Yvon Bonenfant Stefanie Cohen Martha Eddy Sue Hawksley Katja Kolcio Sasha Roubicek Anna Vidali Rebecca Weber sociology David G. Hebert Nathan B. Kruse Sofia Coppola Ceri Hovland soft technology David Francis software Allan Hewitt song Jane Bentley Sheelagh Chadwick C. Michael Hawn Evangelos Himonides Stella Sorby John Staniunas soundscape Mary Noonan Eric Shieh South Africa Michael Carklin Katharine Low South Asian performance Claire Pamment space Andrew Filmer Marco Grosoli Sarah Rubidge Olivia Sagan space and place Michael Carklin Spain Mark Hutchings Michael Thompson solo performance Ben Francombe John Freeman sonic art Frank Millward somatic Manny Emslie sonic elements in multimedia art Michael Dunn Spanish Civil War Anton Pujol somatic awareness Elizabeth Smears somatic epistemology Becky Dyer somatic movement Karryn Allen Becky Dyer Rebecca Weber somatic performance Ben Macpherson somatic practice Ian Lamond somatic practices Jess Allen Polly Hudson Emma Meehan sonic environment James Mooney spatial design Marie Louise Bourbeau Geoffrey Edwards sound Stan Wijnans spatial zones Pauline Brooks sound art Elke Huwiler spatiality Axel Stockburger Stan Wijnans sound diffusion Dave Moore sound effects David Ian Rabey sound-based rhythm Jesús Tejada sound-bridge Rob Dean spectatorial dramaturgy John Keefe spectatorship Markos Hadjioannou Peter O’Rourke speech interfaces Alistair Edwards Christopher Newell speech synthesis Alistair Edwards Christopher Newell Spinoza Denise Doyle spiritual Michael J. Lowis spirituality Sarah Goldingay sports therapy Kimberley Hutt Spring Awakening Bryan M. Vandevender stage business Garry Headland stage design Nick Moran stage directions Mark Hutchings Stage plays Cristina Cano Vara stage translation Jozefina Komporaly stand-up comedy Broderick D. V. Chow Sharon Lockyer Tim Miles Brett Mills Tony Moon Louise Peacock state of the nation Anna Harpin subtitling Olaf Jubin Steiner Jerri Daboo Sufism Deborah Kapchan Stephen Schwartz Paul R. Laird Summer Dancing Katye Coe Joe Moran Stephen Sondheim Natalie Draper Melodie G Galloway Steve Swayne stereotypes Aaron C. Thomas stigma Nick Rowe storytelling Michael Wilson straddle tonal studies Eddy K. M. Chong student embodiment Karryn Allen student placements Roy Priest studio practice Andrew King Paul Vickers study Ruth Way Stuttgart State Opera Kara McKechnie Stanislavski David Allen Tracey Moore subalternity Ming-yan Lai stardom Victoria Lowe sublation Sima Belmar superstardom Vagelis Siropoulos support Amanda Williamson surveillance Elise Morrison Sweeney Todd Benjamin Poore symbolism Alain Wolf synaesthesia Frank Millward synnoetics Ross W. Prior synthesis Glenna Batson synthetic actors Alistair Edwards Christopher Newell synthetic speech Alistair D. N. Edwards T. S. Eliot Yasutaka Maruki taboos Gerard Matte Ian McFadyen tacit knowledge Ross W. Prior Taijiquan Daniel Mroz Taneyev Anastasia Belina tangibles Alice Bayliss Jennifer G. Sheridan Nicolas Villar taste Alex Symons teaching Helen Ferrara Mary Copland Kennedy teaching film Martin Barker teaching practice Ruth Way teaching practices Rebecca Weber team teaching Giselle M. d. S Ferreira technical arts Nick Hunt technical support Andy Brader technology Fadi Mohammad AlGhawanmeh M. T Al-Ghawanmeh Johannes Birringer Kevin Brown Pamela Burnard Grayson Cooke Jaime del Val Scott deLahunta Denise Doyle Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Rami Haddad Andrew Head Allan Hewitt Christian Jacquemin Jamie Jewett Susan Kozel Simon Lock Sally Jane Norman Daniël Ploeger Julie Wilson-Bokowiec technology transfer David Francis teenage sexuality Bryan M. Vandevender telematic Anna Fenemore telematic performance Pauline Brooks television Rachel Carroll Braínne Edge Julia Lippert Derek Paget Tennessee Williams John M. Clum terminology David Lane terrorists Tom Cantrell testimony Ming-yan Lai text Glenna Batson Debbie Green Karen Jurs-Munby text-based chat Toni Sant textual analysis Brett Mills textuality Mary Noonan television comedy Sue Becker Lloyd Peters Thai cinema Leon Hunt television shows Mary Jo Lodge television studies Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe television theory Tony Richards temporality Steve Dixon Sarah T. Ellis Ten Minutes Ago Graham Wood the 1990s Deirdre Osborne the actor's experience Eric T. Hetzler The British New Wave Yael Zarhy-Levo The Capeman Judith A Sebesta Jeffrey Ullom The Changeling Mark Hutchings The Choreographic Lab Vida. L. Midgelow the city Carl Lavery The Confidence Man Rick Mitchell the culture of narcissism Vagelis Siropoulos the diagram Sarah Rubidge The Entertainer Tony Moon The Flying Dutchman Kara McKechnie The Indian Princess John S. Bak The International Society for Music Education Marie McCarthy The Killers Jesse Schlotterbeck The King is Alive Yvonne Griggs The Lord of the Rings Esther MacCallum-Stewart The Medead Geraldine Harris The Merchant Paul J. C. M Franssen The Music Man Roberta Freund Schwartz The Producers Alex Symons The Revels Sarah J. Bartolome Patricia Shehan Campbell The Servant (novella and film) Yael Zarhy-Levo The Troubles Tim Miles The Virgin Suicides Ceri Hovland the Wooster Group Jennifer Parker-Starbuck theatre Gbemisola Adeoti George Belliveau Johannes Birringer Tom Burvill Anthony Bushard Paul Carr Franc Chamberlain Freda Chapple Paul Christman Roger Clegg John M. Clum Brian Crow Sarah Jane Dickenson Steve Dixon Patrick Duggan Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic Sarah T. Ellis Andrew Filmer Helen Freshwater Sarah Goldingay Debbie Green Richard J. Hand Peter Harrop Rand Hazou Dee Heddon Hilda Ho Alison Hodge Kate Katafiasz Paul R. Laird David Haldane Lawrence Victoria Lowe Gordon McDougall Daniel Meyer-Dinkgräfe Roberta Mock Jennifer Oates Mary Oliver Deirdre Osborne Derek Paget Meade Palidofsky Clare Park Jennifer Parker-Starbuck David Ian Rabey David Roesner Tanya Ronder Nick Rowe Graham Saunders Rineke Smilde Yuji Sone Jenn Stephenson Elizabeth Swift Michael Thompson Peter Thomson Ashley Thorpe Naphtaly Shem Tov Cathy Turner Carole-Anne Upton Steve Waters Rebecca Weber Stacy Wolf Roger Wooster Yael Zarhy-Levo Elizabeth Zauderer Theatre 503 Sarah Dickenson theatre and performance Tom Cantrell Katharine Low theatre anthropology Adam J. Ledger theatre history Ellen Marie Peck Aleks Sierz Theatre in Education David Allen theatre lighting Nick Hunt theatre management Helen Brooks theatre masks Stephen Fernandez Daniel Jernigan Russell Pensyl Lee Shangping Theatre of Provocation Piet Defraeye theatre research Dominic Symonds theatre reviews Katalin Trencsényi Three Tales Jem Kelly tragedy Anna Harpin theatre translation Pedro de Senna Tiananmen Square Mike Ingham training John Drummond Dita Judith Federman Kate Napier Theatre Workshop Frances Babbage TIE Roger Wooster theatrical systems Szabolcs Musca Tim Crouch David Lane theatricality Elise Morrison Tokyo woman Barbara Thornbury themes Stuart Price Tom Leabhart Adam J. Ledger Theophilus Cibber Helen Brooks Tom plays Jim O’Loughlin theory Carl Lavery Tonga David G. Hebert therapeutic Melissa Trimingham Tony Kushner Aaron C. Thomas therapeutic action Keren Barzilay-Shechter topology Sarah Rubidge therapeutic massage Mitchell Kossak touch Helen J. Chatterjee therapy Erica E. Ander Keren Barzilay-Shechter Martha Eddy Anne Fenech Chee-Hoo Lum tourism Helen Ferrara Tholpava Koothu Sreedevi K. Nair Thomas Betterton David Roberts trade unions Ming-yan Lai transcendence Benjamin J. Harbert transdisciplinary Dave Everitt Alec Robertson transfer John Milton transference challenges Michael Fry transitional Olivia Sagan translating comedy Rachel Kirk translation Ana Gabriela Macedo Teresa Murjas Duška Radosavljević Stella Sorby Michael Thompson Carole-Anne Upton Rachel Weissbrod Alain Wolf translation processes Szabolcs Musca transmedia Richard Berger traditional indigenous knowledge Mary E. Piercey transmission John Milton traditional music Sarah J. Bartolome Patricia Shehan Campbell Eddy K. M. Chong transnational Mike Ingham transnational adaptation Thy Phu United States J. Bryan Burton verbal comedy Garry Headland trauma Patrick Duggan urban geography Sara Cohen Verfremdungseffekt Dorinda Hulton trauma theory Kate Katafiasz urban planning Philipp Dorstewitz vernacular concepts Martin Barker travel Ewa Mazierska urban space Marsha Berry Jeffrey Johnson Sophia Lycouris Victorian Jane Collins Benjamin Poore travellers Tim Joss Tristram Shandy Eckart Voigts-Virchow US media corporations Olaf Jubin US movie musical Olaf Jubin Tufnell Suna Imre Turkey Laurence Raw twentieth-century Dimple Godiwala type-casting David Roesner typologies Alexandra Kertz-Welzel Kari Veblen ubiquity Thea Brejzek Uncle Toms Cabin Jim O’Loughlin unconscious Gordon McDougall underscoring Rob Dean user experience design Jennifer G. Sheridan usury David Fallow video Gbemisola Adeoti Helen Bailey Johannes Birringer Jamie Jewett videogame Richard Berger violence Hannele Weir violin students Cordelia V. Hall Utopia Arts Frances Rifkin utopianism utopian theatre Siân Adiseshiah Utopiarevue Judith A Sebesta Virgin Mary Rachel O’Riordan virtual Andrew Brown Steve Dillon Anna Fenemore V For Vendetta James Reynolds virtual environment Brian Curson Robyn Stuart VAIN liveart Hilary Kneale Varèse Tim Stephenson Varna Richard Wallis virtual masks Stephen Fernandez Russell Pensyl Lee Shangping virtual reality Stephen Fernandez Daniel Jernigan Russell Pensyl Lee Shangping virtual worlds Esther MacCallum-Stewart Jacquelyn Ford Morie Elizabeth Swift vision Linda J. Thomson visual comedy Garry Headland Vivian Stanshall Karen Morden voice Sama'a Al Hashimi Stephen Baranski Freda Chapple Debbie Green Victoria Lowe Claire MacDonald David Ian Rabey voice acting Alistair Edwards Christopher Newell vulnerability Mark Cariston Seton Wabi-Sabi Jo Pond waki Yasutaka Maruki wearable technologies Thecla Schiphorst Wim Wenders Duška Radosavljević Web 2.0 Miikka Salavuo women Deborah Barkun Jools Gilson-Ellis Duane Warfield weight Susanne Ravn well-being Hilary Bungay Valentina Iadeluca Gunter Kreutz Andrea Sangiorgio Don Stewart Linda J. Thomson well-being measures Usha Menon Welsh arts Steve Garrett Ruth Shade Welsh culture Graeme Harper Welsh-language drama Lisa Lewis Wesley Balk Tracey Moore whanau John Drummond Wales Graeme Harper Lisa Lewis Mike Pearson WHOQOL-BREF Gunter Kreutz walking Fiona Bannon Phil Smith Waltz Steve Swayne Waltz musical Steve Swayne Will Kemp Roger Clegg Willem Van de Wall Andrew Krikun William Chambers Hsin-yun Ou women in rock Lucy O’Brien women's rights Helen Brooks work ethic Larry Brewster Working Title Films Chris Ritchie World of Warcraft Esther MacCallum-Stewart worship Greg Scheer worship music Jane Bentley writerly self Kate Evans writing Peter Harrop Claire Hind Petra Kuppers Michael Pinchbeck written thesis Sarah O'Brien Xena Mary Jo Lodge yoga Katja Münker Yoruba Gbemisola Adeoti young people Jane Coad Matthew Reason young people theatre Tanya Ronder youth Andy Brader Steve Garrett David G. Hebert Hod Orkibi Julie Tiernan youth culture Carol J. Oja Zeami Yasutaka Maruki Zen Jerri Daboo Zulu Time Aleksandar Sasha Dundjerovic