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Description
Tarish Pipkins’s early experiences with the “shape-shifting beast” of racism as he grew up near Pittsburgh, and later his growing awareness of African American history, have influenced his poetry, visual art, and puppetry: a “weapon of mass destruction to fight the beast.” His work with puppets and special-needs children led him to create larger puppet productions such as Just Another Lynching and 5P1N0K10: The Android Who Wants to be Real b boy, which allow him to “[fight] back using puppets as my swords.”
Publication Date
2019
Keywords
puppetry, performing objects, African American culture
Disciplines
African American Studies | Africana Studies | Arts and Humanities | Other Theatre and Performance Studies | Race, Ethnicity and Post-Colonial Studies | Theatre and Performance Studies
Recommended Citation
Pipkins, Tarish, "Shape-Shifter" (2019). Living Objects: African American Puppetry Essays. 7.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/ballinst_catalogues/7
Included in
African American Studies Commons, Africana Studies Commons, Other Theatre and Performance Studies Commons