State of Exception

The history behind the relationship of the Theater Initiation Circle of the Academy of Coimbra and the protests and resistance to the Salazar dictatorship in Portugal

Released
2007
1h 25min
1 votes
DocumentaryHistory

Synopsis

Estado de Excepção is a documentary about CITAC (Coimbra Theater Initiation Circle), a university theater group, revealing history since it was constituted in 1956 until the aftermath of the 1974 revolution. It is the history of the theater group university and, through it, the history of theater in Portugal, revealing two remarkable decades of the History of Portugal. Through the Academy of Coimbra, the documentary reproduces student life, the position of women in society, and the change in mentalities of being and being in the world. It reproduces the existing censorship and the fight against the dictatorship, the resistance to an exhausted regime, as well as the emerging contradictions of the democratic revolution. CITAC has a heritage of 50 years of experience in Coimbra. It carries with it the possibility of the theatrical and civic formation of thinking bodies, constituting a proper ball of a possible model, generation by generation, between studies, theater, and social drama.

Détails techniques

Titre original

Estado de Excepção CITAC: um projeto etnohistórico (1956-1978)

Langue originale

PT

Langues parlées

Portuguese

Production

Compagnies de production

Círculo de Iniciação Teatral da Academia de Coimbra (CITAC)

projeto BUH!

Terratreme

Pays de production

Portugal

Vidéos (1)

Miniature de la vidéo ESTADO DE  EXCEPÇÃO. CITAC: um projecto etnohistórico (english subtitles) du film State of Exception
Featurette

ESTADO DE EXCEPÇÃO. CITAC: um projecto etnohistórico (english subtitles)

YouTube2014
Image d'arrière-plan 1 du film State of Exception

Mots-clés

resistancepolitical activismpolitical instabilitydictatorshipart schoolstreet theateruniversityarttheater communitypolitical documentarypolitical street theatercoimbra, portugalcitacacademic theatersalazarism (1933-74)