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Randia’s Quiet Theatre

Performing Care and Activism with a Romani Elder
Language: English
Published/Copyright: 2025

About this book

Throughout Poland, tens of thousands of elderly people live with disabilities in four-storey walk-up apartment buildings. In many cases their children have emigrated; they live with loneliness, a lack of basic amenities, silence, and the absence of care. They are known as “prisoners of the fourth floor.”

In Randia’s Quiet Theatre Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston mixes autofiction, ethnography, and theatrical improvisation to unravel the politics of aging in Poland. At the centre of the book is Randia, a Romani fortune teller, storyteller, and performer confined to her fourth-floor apartment in old age. In interviews, Randia’s identity is fixed: she tells of the hardships she faced as a Romani girl and as a wife, mother, and grandmother whose relationship with her family was shaped by separation, sickness, and death. But in storytelling sessions staged in her home, Randia steps into characters and is freed: her tales move between the past, the present, and the future, across life and death; her characters look after one another and change history. Kazubowski-Houston finds in Randia’s performances a quiet activism through which she envisages alternative lives and articulates an ethics of care among individuals, communities, and spirits.

Interwoven throughout Randia’s Quiet Theatre are Kazubowski-Houston’s own stories about caring for her elderly and disabled mother, making the book a collaborative, reflexive, and complex creative work. It reveals how ethnographers and their interlocutors can stand on more equal ground. Ultimately it is a profound reflection on how the elderly can live with dignity and how we can care for each other.

Author / Editor information

Contributor: Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston is associate professor in the Department of Theatre, Dance & Performance at York University and the author of Staging Strife: Lessons from Performing Ethnography with Polish Roma Women.

Reviews

“Randia’s Quiet Theatre explores the broader issues of elder care and memory among minority populations. Using performance ethnography Magdalena Kazubowski-Houston explores the life and experiences, both past and present, of one Romani woman living in Poland. She integrates herself as both scholar and participant in the text, demonstrating the possibilities of staging an intimate personal performance to generate imagined pasts and futures to communicate the unsayable and to enact care.” Association for Women in Slavic Studies Heldt Prize jury --- "Randia’s Quiet Theatre is a record of a collaborative [two‑decade-long] relationship, which blurred the line between ethnographer and participant. Field notes, interviews, and transcriptions of their 'dramatic storytelling sessions' [form an] 'intimate ethnography'... Kazubowski-Houston provides an unsentimental, critical assessment of her use of performance. Randia’s Quiet Theatre is a perceptive and expansive contribution to performance studies." Literary Review of Canada --- "Randia’s Quiet Theatre is a perceptive and expansive contribution to performance studies. Kazubowski-Houston models the fluid creativity with which we might approach concerns about infrastructure for seniors and other marginalized communities." Literary Review of Canada --- “An intellectual feast, this book is truly compelling. Kazubowski-Houston’s work is touching, with a powerful ability to transgress traditional boundaries between object and subject of research.” Michał P. Garapich, London Metropolitan University --- “Randia's Quiet Theatre is a powerful work that shows how theatre and performance can lead to cross-cultural connections, self-knowledge, and even survival.” Ioana Szeman, University of East Anglia

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Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
April 4, 2025
eBook ISBN:
9780228024910
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Downloaded on 19.3.2026 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/9780228024910/html
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