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Crash Course Theater
Zola, France, Realism, and Naturalism
Season 1
Episode 31
This week, we're back in Europe to learn about Realism and Naturalism. In the 19th Century, playwrights like Eugene Scribe, Alexandre de Dumas Fils, and Emile Zola remade the French theater, first with Realism, and later with Naturalism. What are those things? Watch and learn.
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13:04
19th century racism contributed to a unique and troubling performance culture in America.
12:07
How did American theater develop after the Revolutionary War?
11:34
In the 18th century, audiences were ready for some really, really dramatic theater.
11:09
After Germany was unified, we got Sturm, Drang, Weimar Classicism and Goethe.
11:37
English Sentimental Comedies weren't that funny, but they were definitely sentimental.
10:51
Let's discuss wizard theater and the rise of classical Chinese theater and Beijing Opera.
10:13
Learn about the all-night dance shows in India that culminate in killing a Demon.
11:51
Under the Shoguns, we get Kabuki and Bunraku. And Samurais get in trouble for watching it.
11:06
American theater existed before Europeans arrived, and the Spanish greatly influenced it.
11:11
Meet Renaissance France's theater greatest playwright: Molière.
12:40
The French Neoclassical revival involved a lot of rules – and some rule-breaking.
10:40
Spain was having kind of a moment in the 16th and 17th centuries.