This prize recognises outstanding achievement in scholarly research in the form of a published monograph for researchers at any stage of their career.
Samuel Beckett and Disability Performance. Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2022.
Samuel Beckett and Disability Performance deftly thinks through the complex disability politics in contemporary stagings of Beckett, with a particular attentiveness to the practices and experiences of disabled theatre artists. Hannah Simpson claims the difficulty of Beckett’s engagement with and deployment of disabled bodies. Her writing is bold, clear, confident, and at times enjoyably polemical in style and tone. The book evidences deep and sustained research, drawing on text, performance analysis and original interviews throughout. The panel found this book to be original, intelligent and dynamic in its thinking and writing. We particularly appreciated the inclusion of interview transcripts, which gave voice to the disabled performers and artists studied in the book, and complemented and extended the analysis given in chapters. The book confidently meets the TaPRA principles of anti-exclusion, collaborative politics, and the inclusion of underrepresented voices in the study of theatre and performance. It is a well-deserved winner of the TaPRA David Bradby Monograph Prize.
SHORTLISTED
Utopian Drama: In Search of a Genre. London: Bloomsbury, 2022
Eco Soma: Pain and Joy in Speculative Performance Encounters. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 2021
Dancing on Violent Ground: Utopia as Dispossession in Euro-American Theater Dance, Northwestern University Press, 2021
In a very strong field, the panel was particularly impressed with the ambition of Stanger’s contribution, and the potential for it to open up expansive conversations/debates across the disciplines TaPRA represents. The volume is rigorous in its theoretical framing and expansive in its engagement with archival materials. The work offers an important provocation to the field of performance studies broadly conceived, and it speaks with some passion to pressing political, ethical and critical debates in and beyond the field.
SHORTLISTED
Applied Theatre: A Pedagogy of Utopia, Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, 2021
The Colonial Public and the Parsi Stage: The Making of the Theatre of Empire (1853–1893), Palgrave Macmillan, 2021
for Shakespeare, Spectatorship and the Technologies of Performance (Cambridge University Press, 2020)
The judges agreed that Shakespeare, Spectatorship, and the Technologies of Performance offers an innovative perspective on the contemporary and historical ways that theatrical performances mediate, stratify, train, and create different forms of acting and spectatorship. The implications of the argument of this book extend far beyond the focus on Shakespeare and, indeed, theatre, demonstrating how dramaturgies of past and present intermingle, with old and new techne revealing and making possible complex productions of events and modes of spectatorship. This accomplished book is prescient, erudite, rigorous and beautifully written.
for Ecodramaturgies: Theatre, Performance and Climate Change (Palgrave Macmillan, 2020)
The judging panel commented that Ecodramaturgies: Theatre, Performance, and Climate Change gathers together a diverse array of theatre and performance practices while skilfully offering an innovative set of concepts which practitioners and scholars can draw upon in creative and critical ways. It distinguishes itself through the provocative challenge it poses to itself and the field of theatre and performance in its final chapter: that is, considering the limits of theatrical representation and academic research with respect to indigenous ecodramaturgies, given the history of cultural, political, and environmental exploitation by the West. This is an important book that grapples cogently and persuasively with the most urgent of critical issues.
Performer Training and Technology: Preparing Our Selves (Routledge, 2020)
Prison Cultures: Performance, Resistance, Desire (Intellect, 2019)
for The Ecologies of Amateur Theatre
The judges felt that Ecologies of Amateur Theatre offers a rigorous, engaging, overdue intervention into dominant presumptions – in theatre scholarship and professional theatre practice – about the ‘value’ of amateur theatre. This is a thoroughly researched, theoretically astute, critically vibrant and methodologically innovative approach to questions of cultural practice and theatre touching deeply on a range of issues of very broad interest, including craft, capital, feeling, temporality and much more. The monograph upends multiple presumptions and genuinely offers our field new and significant knowledge about a much-maligned sector. The authors research with feeling, which is refreshing and highly appropriative given the focus of the work: this is a valuably self-reflexive attempt to locate practices and objects of study without fixing either rigidly which offers an inspiring model to others. The engagement with those ‘studied’ is sensitive and respectful and the inclusion of journal entries brought the voices of the researchers, as well as the subjects of the research, into clear view.
for Staging British South Asian Culture: Bollywood and Bhangra in British Theatre (Routledge, 2017)
for Madness, Art and Society: Beyond Illness (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018)
for Theatre Aurality (Palgrave Macmillan, 2017)
For Choreomania: Dance and Disorder (Oxford University Press, 2018).
This substantial volume constructs a compelling picture of ‘choreomania’ – of mad, disorderly movement in public space – drawing on rigorous, extensive archival research and travelling through a wide range of disciplinary fields and methodologies, from psychiatry to sociology, from ethnography to journalism. An outstanding book that enriches dance studies and performance studies, it places ‘choreomania’ within historical, medical, political and social contexts, while also demonstrating how past events still resonate and have relevance today.
For Choreomania: Dance and Disorder (Oxford University Press, 2018).
This substantial volume constructs a compelling picture of ‘choreomania’ – of mad, disorderly movement in public space – drawing on rigorous, extensive archival research and travelling through a wide range of disciplinary fields and methodologies, from psychiatry to sociology, from ethnography to journalism. An outstanding book that enriches dance studies and performance studies, it places ‘choreomania’ within historical, medical, political and social contexts, while also demonstrating how past events still resonate and have relevance today.
for Theatre and Governance in Britain, 1500-1900: Democracy, Disorder and the State (Cambridge University Press, 2017)
for Comic Acting and Portraiture in Late-Georgian and Regency England (Cambridge University Press, 2015).
The judges felt that the book moved adroitly across concept, example (actor), and exemplification (illustration) to account for the reciprocity of interest, nomenclature, and patronage between Georgian-era performers and painters. Without a shred of pedantry readers are coached in the criteria by which to understand what it means for a painter to capture something “inherently theatrical” about a specific character yet also incorporate the accumulation of a performer’s reputation and the epitome of their unique technique.
for Contemporary Black British Playwrights (Palgrave, 2015)
for Dramaturgy and Architecture: Theatre, Utopia and the Built Environment (Palgrave, 2015)
For her work and leadership on the project Challenging Concepts of Liquid Place.
The judges felt that from inside, from outside, this project shows change towards place in action and declares its ambition for further work. It is the work of considered scholarship and practice: far reaching, versatile, inclusive and impactful both for the communities with which it worked and for the academic sector which TaPRA represents.
A History of the Berliner Ensemble (Cambridge University Press)
Queer Performance and Contemporary Ireland: Dissent and Disorientation (Palgrave)
Directing scenes and senses: the thinking of Regie (Manchester University Press)
Acts of Desire: Women, and Sex on Stage 1800-1930.(Oxford University Press)
Ancient Greek and Contemporary Performance: Collected Essays. (University of Exeter Press)
Immersive Theatres. Intimacy and Immediacy in Contemporary Performance. (Palgrave)
Echo’s Voice : The Theatres of Sarraute, Duras, Cixous and Renaude. (Legenda Books)
Passionate Amateurs: Theatre, Communism and Love. (Michigan University Press)
for the iPad app and book: Played in Britain: Modern British Theatre in 100 Plays
For the ‘Imagining Autism project’
Practice as Research in the Arts: Principles, Protocols, Pedagogies, Resistances (Palgrave)
Fair Play: Art, Performance and Neoliberalism (Palgrave)
for her book, The Making of the West End Stage: Marriage, Management and the Mapping of Gender in London
Twentieth Century British Theatre: Art, Industry and Empire (Cambridge University Press)
Britain’s Had Talent: A History of Variety Theatre (Palgrave)
Contemporary Mise en Scene: Staging Theatre Today (Routledge)
Only current TaPRA members can submit nominations for our awards or elections. Each nomination requires a seconder, who must also be a current member.
Our 2024 conference will be hosted in partnership with the University of Warwick, 27-29 August 2025
Our 2024 conference will be hosted in partnership with the University of Warwick.