|
Oz and the Musical: Performing the American Fairy Tale. Oxford University Press, 2023
“Let It Go!": Child Fans, Song, and the Frozen Franchise.
In Fan
Phenomena: Disney, edited by Sabrina Mittermeier, Intellect (2023).
|
|
Children’s Musical Cultures: Industries and Audiences.
With Tyler
Bickford in The Routledge International Handbook of Children, Adolescents,
and Media (2022).
|
|
Screen Adaptations of The Wizard of Oz and
Metafilmicity in Children's Film.
In The
Oxford Handbook of Children’s Film, edited by Noel Brown (2022).
|
|
Soaring into Song: Youth and Yearning in Animated Musicals of
the Disney Renaissance.
In American
Music (2021) 39 (2): 182-185.
|
|
Disney.
In The SAGE Encyclopedia
of Children and Childhood Studies, edited by Daniel Thomas Cook
(2020).
|
|
Beginning with Do Re Mi:
Childhood and The Sound of Music.
In Children,
Childhood and Musical Theater, edited by James Leve and Donelle Ruwe.
Routledge (2020).
|
|
“My Corner of the Sky":
Adolescence and Coming of Age in the Musicals of Stephen Schwartz.
In The Routledge
Companion to the Contemporary Musical, edited by Jessica Sternfeld and
Elizabeth Wollman. Routledge (2019).
|
|
"Ease on Down the
Road": Black Routes and the Soul of The Wiz.
In Adapting The Wizard of
Oz: Musical Versions from Baum to MGM and Beyond, edited by Danielle
Birkett and Dominic McHugh. Oxford University Press (2018).
|
|
"Love Is an Open Door":
Repeating and Revising Disney’s Musical Tropes in Frozen.
In Contemporary Musical
Film, edited by Beth Carroll and KevinDonnelly. University of Edinburgh
Press (2017)
|
|
You Can’t Stop the Tweet:
Convergence Culture and Networks of Participation in the Live Television
Musical.
In iBroadway: Musical
Theatre in the Digital Age, edited by Jessica Hillman. Palgrave (2017).
|
|
Repetition, Resistance, and the
Child as Performing Object in Disney’s It’s a Small World.
In Reimagining the Child:
Proceedings of the 2016 Rutgers-Camden Graduate Student Conference in
Childhood Studies, edited by Julian Burton and Katie Fredricks (2017).
|
|
Book Review, Childhood
and Nineteenth-Century American Theatre: The Work of the Marsh Troupe of
Juvenile Actors by Shauna Vey
In The Lion and the
Unicorn 40, no.
1 (2016): 124-127.
|
|
Oz and the Musical: The
American Art Form and the Reinvention of the American Fairy Tale.
In Studies in Musical Theatre 9, no. 1 (2015): 53-69.
|
No comments:
Post a Comment