Skip to content
  • Books
    • Browse Categories
  • Publishers
  • About Us
  • Log in
Cart
indiepubs Desktop Logo indiepubs Mobile Logo
indiepubs Desktop Logo indiepubs Mobile Logo
  • Books
    • Browse Categories
  • Publishers
  • About Us
Log in Search Cart
0 in stock
[{"id":44783740551362,"title":"Default Title","option1":"Default Title","option2":null,"option3":null,"sku":"9780231180665","requires_shipping":true,"taxable":true,"featured_image":null,"available":true,"name":"Melodrama Unbound","public_title":null,"options":["Default Title"],"price":13500,"weight":907,"compare_at_price":null,"inventory_management":"shopify","barcode":"9780231180665","requires_selling_plan":false,"selling_plan_allocations":[],"quantity_rule":{"min":1,"max":null,"increment":1}}]
    Share Share on Facebook Tweet Tweet on X Pin it Pin on Pinterest

    You may also like

    Kartemquin Films
    Kartemquin Films
    Patricia Aufderheide
    Paperback
    $26.95
    Cover image for Stereophonic, isbn: 9781636702162
    Stereophonic
    David Adjmi
    Paperback
    $19.95
    Undesirability and Her Sisters
    Undesirability and Her Sisters
    Tiffany E. Barber
    Paperback
    $30.00
    Directed by Yasujiro Ozu
    Directed by Yasujiro Ozu
    Shiguéhiko Hasumi. Translated by Ryan Cook, with an introduction by Aaron Gerow.
    Paperback
    $29.95
    Glass. Kill. Bluebeard. Imp.
    Glass. Kill. Bluebeard. Imp.
    Caryl Churchill
    Paperback
    $16.95
    Patricia Aufderheide

    Kartemquin Films

    Regular price $26.95 Save $-26.95
    How filmmaker-philosophers brought the dream of making documentaries and strengthening democracy to award-winning reality—with help from nuns, gang members, skateboarders, artists, disability activists, and more.
     
    The evolution of Kartemquin Films—Peabody, Emmy, and Sundance-awarded and Oscar-nominated makers of such hits as Hoop Dreams and Minding the Gap—is also the story of U.S. independent documentary film over the last seventy years. Patricia Aufderheide reveals the untold story of how Kartemquin developed as an institution that confronts the brutal realities of the industry and society while empowering people to claim their right to democracy.
     
    Kartemquin filmmakers, inspired by pragmatic philosopher John Dewey, made their studio a Chicago-area institution. Activists for a more public media, they boldly confronted in their own productions the realities of gender, race, and class. They negotiated the harsh terms and demands of commercial media, from 16mm through the streaming era, while holding fast to their democratic vision. Drawing on archival research, interviews, and personal experience, Aufderheide tells an inspiring story of how to make media that matters in a cynical world.

    Kartemquin Films
    David Adjmi

    Stereophonic

    Regular price $19.95 Save $-19.95

    Winner of five 2024 Tony Awards, including Best Play

    An epic play with music that examines the human costs of the quest for artistic greatness.

    The place: Sausalito. The time: the mid-1970s. The carpet: brown shag. Stereophonic brings us inside the cloistered world of a recording studio as a rock band on the brink of superstardom attempts to create their sophomore album. The ensuing pressures open up cracks in the band’s once-easy camaraderie, and spats over issues like tempo and song length begin to reveal deeper problems in the band’s foundation. Running on a diet of booze, sleep deprivation, and a giant bag of cocaine, interpersonal relationships are pushed to the breaking point as a process that was meant to last a few weeks becomes a neverending slog. With original songs by Arcade Fire’s Will Butler, David Adjmi’s play is an electrifying portrait of a band wracked with division and disillusionment that nevertheless might be on the verge of creating a masterpiece.


    Cover image for Stereophonic, isbn: 9781636702162
    Tiffany E. Barber

    Undesirability and Her Sisters

    Regular price $30.00 Save $-30.00

    How Black women’s visual work functions in an era of new racial and gender meaning

    In the wake of contemporary art’s post-Black turn and the mainstreaming of intersectionality, Undesirability and Her Sisters charts a new genealogy of Black women’s art that exposes the unfinished project of racial and gender empowerment in the twenty-first century. Tiffany Barber argues that Black women’s social positions at the intersection of race, gender, sexuality, and class are inherently queer, thus spurring unexpected aesthetic strategies that throw into high relief the ethical terrain of what it means to be Black and a woman now.

    Undesirability and Her Sisters collates what Barber terms “undesirable” representations of Black female bodies in recent American sculpture, collage, photography, and dance-based performance art by Kara Walker, Wangechi Mutu, Xaviera Simmons, and Narcissister. These works not only engage the visual senses but also incorporate olfactory, haptic, and sonic experiences that challenge traditional interpretations of Blackness and womanhood in art history, Black Studies, feminist and gender studies, dance and performance studies, and queer studies. Instead of transcendental beauty, wholeness, and individual and collective becoming, the perverse Black female figures profiled here eschew sublimation and synthesis as necessary responses to racial and gender subjugation in the past, present, and future.

    Through its unique, groundbreaking analysis, this book contributes to the ongoing discussions on the ethics of representation—the capacity to speak and act for oneself, to have significance and impact, and ultimately, to reject acknowledgment.


    Undesirability and Her Sisters
    Shiguéhiko Hasumi. Translated by Ryan Cook, with an introduction by Aaron Gerow.

    Directed by Yasujiro Ozu

    Regular price $29.95 Save $-29.95
    First published in 1983, Shiguéhiko Hasumi's Directed by Yasujirō Ozu has become one of the most influential books on cinema written in Japanese. This pioneering translation brings Hasumi's landmark work to an English-speaking public for the first time, inviting a new readership to engage with this astutely observed, deeply moving meditation on the oeuvre of one of the giants of world cinema. Complemented by a critical introduction from acclaimed film scholar Aaron Gerow and rendered fluidly in Ryan Cook's agile translation, this volume will grace the shelves of cinephiles for many years to come.

    Directed by Yasujiro Ozu
    Caryl Churchill

    Glass. Kill. Bluebeard. Imp.

    Regular price $16.95 Save $-16.95

    A girl made of glass. Gods and murders. A serial killer’s friends. And a secret in a bottle. This volume also contains the short plays Seven Jewish Children, Ding Dong the Wicked, Pigs and Dogs, War and Peace Gaza Piece, Tickets Now on Sale, and Beautiful Eyes.


    Glass. Kill. Bluebeard. Imp.
    Sarah Ruhl

    How to transcend a happy marriage (TCG Edition)

    Regular price $14.95 Save $-14.95

    “This new play is a subversive enchantment. It is part absurd domestic seriocomedy, part erotic magic realism, unflinching about taboos and about questioning that, just maybe, monogamy isn’t enough.” —Linda Winer, Newsday

    Over dinner with another married couple, George and her husband grow fascinated by stories of their friends’ new acquaintance—an intriguing younger woman named Pip. What begins as an innocent intellectual discussion turns into a sexually explosive New Year’s Eve party after George extends an invitation to Pip and her two live-in boyfriends, raising the question: What ultimately binds human beings together?


    How to transcend a happy marriage (TCG Edition)
    Back to Performing Arts
    • Contact IndiePubs
    • FAQs
    • Terms of Sale and Service
    • Privacy Notice
    • Returns & Refunds
    indiepubs

    © 2025 indiepubs

    Designed and built by Supadu