In recent years drag performance has moved from the fringes to emerge as a mainstream phenomenon, showcased on TV shows in the US and the UK.
This collection offers a diverse range of critical engagements by drag performers, makers, scholars and writers reflecting on work from the UK, USA, Israel, Germany and Australia. Moving beyond discussions of gender theory, the essays consider contemporary drag performance practices, connecting them to the histories, communities and politics that produced them.
Chapters range across discussions of drag kings in the US, UK and drag and activism; the influence of RuPaul on the generation of new forms of work in New York; transfeminist critiques of drag; 'bio'/faux queens;
engagements with race and ethnicity through drag performance; drag andragogy; audience concerns; drag intersections with animal personas, and how drag performance relates to personal narratives of history and identity.
Collectively the contributions focus on drag as a mode of performance that is diverse and that uncorsets the easy thought that drag is simply a cross dressing man in a dress or a woman in a suit.
Mark Edward is a pracademic and a category dodger. His performance work in live art, contemporary dance performance, theatre, drag and post-modern choreography are often rooted in political and social narratives such as fat body shaming, age(eing) invisibility, homophobia, toxic and bruised masculinity, disability, mental health, class and him being neurodivergent as a ADHDancer and ADHDrag. He has featured in Attitude magazine, Scene magazine and GT magazine, and been interviewed for several BBC radio and TV documentaries, focusing on drag histories and activism, with drag performers Choriza May, Mutha Tucka and Miss Dixie Swallows. He has also featured in 'The History of Drag' documentary, alongside Boy George, lanah.p and Ginny Lemon. His research into drag cultures provided the content for the three-part BBC 'Drag Herstories' series. He is the author of the book 'Mesearch and the Performing Body' (Palgrave), and co-editor (alongside Professor Stephen Farrier) of the books 'Contemporary Drag Practices and Performers: Drag in a Changing Scene vol 1', 'Drag Histories, Herstories and Hairstories; Drag in a Changing Scene vol 2' and 'Drag: the Basics' (Routledge) with Professor Chris Greenough. He is the writer, and producer of the acclaimed immersive installation work 'Council House Movie Star' and the the first person to bring practical drag studies into higher education. He has performed with and worked for a range of arts organisations and artists including Rambert Dance, Senza Tempo Dance Theatre, Penny Arcade in her pivotal work 'Bad Reputation' and with the Australian performance activist Jeremy Goldstein in his 'Truth to Power Cafè'.
Mark Taylor-Batty is Associate Professor of Theatre Studies and Deputy Head of School in the School of English at the University of Leeds, UK. His previous publications include
The Theatre of Harold Pinter (Bloomsbury, 2014),
About Pinter: The Playwright and the Work (Faber and Faber, 2005),
Roger Blin: Collaborations and Methodologies (Peter Lang, 2007) and, he co-authored with his wife, Juliette Taylor-Batty,
Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot (Continuum, 2009).
Stephen Farrier, PhD is Professor and Deputy Principal at Rose Bruford College, UK. Broadly, his work focuses on queer performance and its histories, and community performance practices related to gender and sexuality. In 2023 he co-edited a special double edition of
Contemporary Theatre Review, entitled 'What's Queer about Queer Performance Now?' with Alyson Campbell and Manola-Gayatri Kumarswamy. Since co-editing work with Alyson Campbell on
Queer Dramaturgies: International Perspectives on Where Performance Leads Queer (2015) he has with, Mark Edward for Bloomsbury, co-edited the previous two volumes of this current edited collection on drag performance:
Contemporary Drag Performers and Practices: Drag in a Changing Scene, Vol. 1 (2020) and
Drag Histories, Herstories and Hairstories: Drag in a Changing Scene, Vol. 2 (2021). He has written on the playwright Joe Orton for
Studies in Theatre and Performance (37(2), 2017) and intergenerational queer performance work for the
Journal of Homosexuality (62(10), 2015). He has written many chapters for various edited collections on a range of areas connected to queer performance, from HIV/AIDS narratives to queer readings of the work of Sarah Kane. In addition to his research outputs, he is active in his sector organizations and supports Research Integrity through ethics work.
Enoch Brater is the Kenneth T. Rowe Collegiate Professor of Dramatic Literature, Professor of English and Theater at the University of Michigan and the series editor of Methuen Drama's Miller scholarly editions. He has written extensively on the work of Samuel Beckett and Arthur Miller.
Enoch Brater is the Kenneth T. Rowe Collegiate Professor of Dramatic Literature, Professor of English and Theater at the University of Michigan. He is series editor of Methuen Drama's Arthur Miller scholarly editions, and with Mark Taylor-Batty of Methuen Drama's Engage series. He has written extensively on the work of Samuel Beckett and Arthur Miller.