![]() Natalie Portman deftly defies the genre conventions of what would otherwise be a predictable, unsettling melodrama about an unhinged ballet dancer who goes not so quietly crazy just as her career takes off. Because of Portman’s uncanny empathy for her character, the over-the-top camera angles and story lines of Darren Aronofsky’s The Black Swan aren’t quite as irritating as they might be without a lead actor who brings such nuanced insight and intuition to the role. For Your Viewing Pleasure: Gender, Sexuality, and Popular Culture.Feminist Performance Festival Roundtable (2011).“Feminism, Utopia, and Performance”: The Progressives Corner (2012).Performing Que(e)ries Part IV: Holly Hughes in conversation with Jill Dolan (2013).“What Makes a Jewish Theatre Artist” (2013).Teaching and Mentoring, for Grad Students and New Faculty.“Feminist Performance Criticism and the Popular: Reviewing Wendy Wasserstein” (2008).“Colleague-Criticism: Performance, Writing, and Queer Collegiality” (2009).“On ‘Publics’: A Feminist Constellation of Keywords” (2011).“Casual Racism and Stuttering Failures: An Ethics for Classroom Engagement” (2012).“Performing Jewishness In and Out of the Classroom” (2012).“Feeling Women’s Culture: Women’s Music, Lesbian Feminism, and the Impact of Emotional Memory” (2012).“To Teach and to Mentor: Toward Our Collective Future” (2013).
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