Table of contents : Contents Restoring Theatre Activism in Postcommunist Eastern and Central Europe-Diana Manole Alternative Theatre in the Postcolonies of Communism-Vessela S. Warner Part One. Re/Inventing Alternative Theatre after the Fall of Communism 1. Reality Makers: Hungarian Independent Theatre before and after Communism-Andrea Tompa 2. The Center and the Fringe: Post-Soviet Alternative Theatre in Estonia-Jaak Rähesoo 3. Theatre NO99: An Alternative State Theatre-Luule Epner 4. The Search for Alternatives in Latvian Theatre, 1991–2004: A Creator’s Notebook-Baņuta Rubess 5. The Assault of Alternative Theatre against the Limited Universe-Angelina Roşca 6. Teatr.doc and the Struggle for Authenticity and Relevance in Contemporary Russian Drama and Theatre-John Freedman 7. DAH Theatre: Decontaminating Serbian Culture-Dennis Barnett Part II. Postcommunist Aesthetics and Performance Dissent 8. Fusing Performative Boundaries: Relations among Text, Actor, and Space in the Experimental Style of Theatre Laboratory Sfumato-Violeta Detcheva and Vessela S. Warner 9. Theatre Laboratory Alma Alter: Jerzy Grotowski’s Legacy and the Heterogeneous Origin of Bulgarian Alternative Theatre-Vessela S. Warner 10. Redefining Kitsch and Camp in Russian Opera: Moscow’s Helikon Opera in Transition-Christopher Silsby 11. Prague’s Studio Ypsilon and the Czech Liberated Theatre: An Intercultural Perspective at the Start of the Twenty-First Century-Barry Freeman 12. After the Avalanche: Czech Theatre’s Search for the Meaning of Alternative-Dennis C. Beck 13. Playing with Citizenship: NSK and Janez Janša-S. E. Wilmer 14. The Perfect Other: Performing Artistic Freedom in Solidarity with the Belarus Free Theatre-Margarita Kompelmakher Notes Bibliography Contributors Index