• Title of article

    Politics of Staging Capitalist Society in Transcultural Adaptations of Brecht’s The Threepenny Opera by Ajoka Theatre in Pakistan

  • Author/Authors

    Kayani ، Taimur - Universiti Putra Malaysia , Ali Termizi ، Arbaayah - Universiti Putra Malaysia , Wan Yahya ، Wan Roselezam - Universiti Putra Malaysia , Baizura Bahar ، Ida - Universiti Putra Malaysia

  • Pages
    12
  • From page
    23
  • To page
    34
  • Abstract
    Brecht’s canonical literary work’s indigenization in Pakistan can offer a valuable transcultural adaptation study because it was performed through a radical theatre with a distinct dramaturgy and political philosophy in two different cultural contexts and historical frame of references. As the foremost representative of Brecht’s radical dramaturgy, philosophy and literary works in Pakistan since 1983, Ajoka theatre utilized these adaptations as a platform for airing a critique on capitalism in Pakistan. Prior researches focused on the formal criticism: visual and aural elements. No contextual reading is conducted to explore its political and cultural dimensions of these transcultural adaptations in providing descriptive critique on capitalist society of Pakistan. Realizing the paucity of indigenous academic work in this area this article takes this initiative and addresses this ‘research gap’ by first conducting a new historicist study of Brecht selected work and its transcultural adaptations in Pakistan. This article also investigates the theatrical and cultural factors which contributed to the enormous success of these transcultural adaptations of Brecht’s selected work in Pakistan in light of Hutcheon’s theory of adaptation.
  • Keywords
    Transcultural adaptation , Ajoka Theatre , representations of Capitalist society , Hutcheon’s Theory of Adaptation , New Historicism
  • Journal title
    International Journal Of Applied Linguistics And English Literature
  • Serial Year
    2018
  • Journal title
    International Journal Of Applied Linguistics And English Literature
  • Record number

    2459424