'Theatre amateurs and professionals will often claim that theatre saved my life. But what, more specifically, might be the curative properties of theatre? What is the nature of its cure? And, conversely, how has the theatre figured in the imaginary and development of other kinds of taking cures? In this smartly organised and lucidly written book, Fintan Walsh illuminates the therapeutic effects and affects of theatrical performance, and the theatrical inspirations for Western therapeutic practices. Theatre & Therapy takes the reader from the more expected historical examples of Aristotle's catharsis and Freud's interpretation of dreams to the less frequently ploughed terrain of contemporary performance practices that experiment with affective intensity or intensive listening as therapeutic. This is an authoritative and nuanced introduction to the field. I felt better at the end of this book.' - Erin Hurley, McGill University, USA 'timely and valuable [...] Walsh's analysis suggests that attention to the historical, material conditions in which therapy developed reveals that making and feeling theatre reconfigures the 'therapeutic' as an inherently political maneuver [...] Theatre & Therapy is a valuable and nuanced foundational text for the future study of theatre, therapy, and well-being.' - Charlotte Bell, Theatre Survey 'Woven throughout with interesting anecdotes, the author binds together a very broad range of perspectives on the field of theatre and therapy. This highly readable book would be useful for students and practitioners who are looking to get started on the topic, or researchers seeking references in the field of theatre and therapy [...] It is a feat that Walsh managed to fit so many viewpoints, productions and artists into one small book.' - Emma Meehan, Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance