Could you explain it for me again? People explain it and explain it and I still can't hold on to the meaning. V. frustrating.
Xander ,'Conversations with Dead People'
We're Literary 2: To Read Makes Our Speaking English Good
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
A dramaturg is (according to the BF) the advocate of the play in the production process. He supports the work with research--he might, for example, give the directors and designers a historic overview of the period they picked and how it might tie in with the play, or research unusual language in the piece. He also works with the writer--if there is one--on rewrites if needed, and on things like theme and structure. In a theatre with a full season, the Literary Manager will be choosing work for the next season (reading and critiquing hundreds of plays) and can't work on each play in rehearsal with the writer and director. In smaller theaters, one person does everything.
Ooh, I want that job.
Consuela, I finished up Demon in the Freezer (about smallpox) on the plane and Ken Alibek figured prominently. I'm going to have to go out and get it now...
I listened to Germs (about biological weapons) while driving home, and Ken Alibek was in that too. Was it officially scary disease reading week?
I try to read the most seatmate fear-inducing book as possible on flights.
(not really, it just happens, Maybe just the subconscious.)
I try to read the most seatmate fear-inducing book as possible on flights.
I was reading a book in which the New Madrid fault goes off (what's the proper word for that??) and there's all kinds of madness and people die and shit. That was kinda freaky, as I was heading towards the midwest...
For some reason, prior to the Death!Plague! books, every airplane book featured a plane crash as the central theme. Or, you know...genocide.
"Hi! Can I sit here? Would you like to discuss Armenia? "
Okay, that's a very weird coincidence. In fact, the only reason I got it was because my brother is an infectious disease specialist and he's doing some work with the staff at Vector, flying off to Siberia every few months. It's world-saving sort of stuff and I'm extremely chuffed. So he said I needed to read Biohazard and while I'm glad I did, I'm also very unnerved by it.
Thanks, Robin. So the Literary Manager is also the dramaturg?