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9781584653110

Our Musicals, Ourselves

by
  • ISBN13:

    9781584653110

  • ISBN10:

    1584653116

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2003-04-01
  • Publisher: Brandeis Univ
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Summary

A retired professor of theater arts from Brandeis University serves up the first social history of American musical theater, covering the broad sweep of plays, from "Showboat" to "Urinetown," discussing the impact of this brand of theater on culture and society. (Performing Arts)

Author Biography

John Bush Jones is a retired Professor of Theater Arts at Brandeis University. He has written theater criticism for numerous journals and newspapers, including the Boston Phoenix, the Kansas City Star, the Boston Herald, and the New England Theater Journal. He has directed dozens of musicals in professional, community, and university theaters

Table of Contents

Foreword by Sheldon Harnick ix
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction 1(11)
1. Patriotism, Xenophobia, and World War I 12(40)
2. The Musicals of the Roaring Twenties 52(27)
3. Coping with Depression 79(44)
4. World War II and the Rodgers and Hammerstein Years 123(38)
5. From Isolationism to Idealism in the Cold War Years 161(41)
6. Black and Jewish Musicals since the 1960's 202(33)
7. Issue-Driven Musicals of the Turbulent Years 235(34)
8. Fragmented Society, Fragmented Musicals 269(36)
9. "A Recycled Culture," Nostalgia, and Spectacle 305(26)
l0. New Voices, New Perspectives 331(29)
APPENDIXES
Appendix A. Broadway Musical Production, 1919-1929
360(2)
Appendix B. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1929-1938
362(2)
Appendix C. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1939-1945
364(2)
Appendix D. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1946-1960
366(3)
Appendix E. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1960-1969
369(2)
Appendix F. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1969-1979
371(1)
Appendix G. Long-Running Diversionary Musicals, 1979-2000
372(3)
Sources Cited 375(16)
Index 391(1)
Index 391
0201782634
Preface 11(2)
Read Me First
There are no little things
One 13(2)
One space between sentences
Spacing after punctuation; monospaced versus proportional type
Two 15(4)
Quotation marks
Using real quotation marks; avoid this foolish mistake; punctuation with quotation marks
Three 19(2)
Apostrophes
Using real apostrophes; where to place the apostrophe
Four 21(4)
Dashes
Using hyphens, en, and em dashes; where to use dashes
Five 25(4)
Special characters
Using Key Caps to access special characters
Six 29(2)
Accent marks
Placing accent marks over letters; chart of the most common accent marks
Seven 31(2)
Underlining
Never underline; alternatives to underlining
Eight 33(2)
Capitals
Avoiding all caps; a little puzzle
Nine 35(2)
Kerning
Adjusting the space between letters
Ten 37(8)
Tabs and indents
Using first line indents; tabs; numbering paragraphs
Eleven 45(2)
Widows and orphans
Recognizing and avoiding them
Twelve 47(4)
Hyphenations and line breaks
Avoiding hyphenations; sensitive line breaks
Thirteen 51(4)
Leading, or linespace
Understanding leading; keeping the linespacing consistent; adjusting the linespacing of all caps
Fourteen 55(4)
Paragraph spacing
Use space or an indent, not both; adjusting the space between paragraphs; don't indent first paragraphs
Fifteen 59(2)
Justified text
Optimum line length for justified text; rivets
Sixteen 61(2)
Hanging the punctuation
Eliminating visual interruptions of the aligned edge of text; non-breaking spaces em, en, and thin spaces
Seventeen 63(2)
Serif and sans serif fonts
Readability, legibility; adjusting sans serif for better readability
Eighteen 65(4)
Combining typefaces
Using contrast to combine typefaces
Nineteen 69(2)
Numerals in odd places
Fractions; superscript and subscript; numbers in a list
Twenty 71(5)
Miscellaneous
Using italic and bold; typing A.M. and P.m.; aligning baselines; allowing white space; crowding text in a box; typing numbers; being consistent; listings with bullets; abbreviating; reducing point size of punctuation; italic type
Twenty-one 76(2)
On the web
Typographic principles on the web: what's different and what's not
Twenty-two 78(3)
Quiz: Make this prose look more professional
Appendix A 81(2)
Compendium of rules-a checklist
Appendix B 83(3)
List of most commonly used special characters and accent marks; chart of every accent mark available and how to type them
Index 86(2)
Colophon 88

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