Essays

The Paradoxes of Kosovo in the Theatre of Jeton Neziraj

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21827/ejtp.1.42894

Keywords:

theatre in Kosovo, Jeton Neziraj, post-war Kosovo, Balkan conflict, political plays

Abstract

At the core of this essay are the paradoxes of Kosovo, the youngest country in Europe as reflected in the theatre of Jeton Neziraj from Pristina, one of the most representative playwrights in the Balkans. Neziraj’s controversial and often censored texts, written in an absurd and ironic style, deal with current and burning social topics in Kosovo, the paradoxical realm of instability, controlled ethnic minorities, religious fundamentalism, nationalism, racism, immigration, homophobia, and corruption. For his plays, he has been blamed as ‘antipatriotic’, ‘Yugonostalgic’, and a ‘betrayer of national interests’. This essay includes interviews with the author, reflections on the contrasts and suffering of this ‘newborn’ country, and descriptions of the theatre performances directed by Blerta Rrustemi Neziraj.

Author Biography

Anna Maria Monteverdi, Department of Cultural Heritage, University of Milano (Italy)

Anna Maria Monteverdi is a lecturer in Theatre Studies at the University of Milano, Department of Cultural Heritage. Her research interests are theatre in the Balkans and theatre and new technologies. She curated the first Italian edition of the plays by Jeton Neziraj and she made a video documentary Teatri i ri në Kosovë about him; the video was broadcast on  Italian television on World Theatre Day 2017. She has published books on the Living Theatre, digital theatre and Robert Lepage (Memory, Mask and Machine in the Theatre of Robert Lepage, 2018). She directed a documentary on Tomi Janežič’s theatre work (the Care for the Theatre, 2018), selected at the European Film Festival in Lecce, Italy and projected within the first EASTAP international conference in Paris (2018).

Published

2019-04-15

Issue

Section

Essays