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Books > Arts & Architecture > Performing arts
Analysis of improvisation as a compositional practice in the
Commedia dell'Arte and related traditions from the Renaissance to
the 21st century. Domenic Pietropaolo takes textual material from
the stage traditions of Italy, France, Germany and England, and
covers comedic drama, dance, pantomime and dramatic theory, and
more. He shines a light onto 'the signs of improvised
communication'. The book is comprehensive in its analysis of
improvised dramatic art across theatrical genres, and is multimodal
in looking at the spoken word, gestural and non-verbal signs. The
book focusses on dramatic text as well as: - The semiotics of stage
discourse, including semantic, syntactic and pragmatic aspects of
sign production - The physical and material conditions of
sign-production including biomechanical limitations of masks and
costumes. Semiotics and Pragmatics of Stage Improvisation is the
product of an entire career spent researching the semiotics of the
stage and it is essential reading for semioticians and students of
performance arts.
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Refugee Boy
(Paperback)
Benjamin Zephaniah; Adapted by Lemn Sissay; Edited by Lynette Goddard
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R335
Discovery Miles 3 350
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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An eye for an eye. It's very simple. You choose your homeland like
a hyena picking and choosing where he steals his next meal from.
Scavenger. Yes you grovel to the feet of Mengistu and when his
people spit at you and kick you from the bowl you scuttle across
the border. Scavenger. As a violent civil war rages back home in
Ethiopia, teenager Alem and his father are in a bed and breakfast
in Berkshire. It's his best holiday ever. The next morning his
father is gone and has left a note explaining that he and his
mother want to protect Alem from the war. This strange grey country
of England is now his home. On his own, and in the hands of the
social services and the Refugee Council, Alem lives from letter to
letter, waiting to hear something from his father. Then he meets
car-obsessed Mustapha, the lovely 'out-of-your-league' Ruth and
dangerous Sweeney - three unexpected allies who spur him on in his
fight to be seen as more than just the Refugee Boy. Lemn Sissay's
remarkable stage adaptation of Benjamin Zephaniah's bestselling
novel is published here in the Methuen Drama Student Edition
series, featuring commentary & notes by Professor Lynette
Goddard (Royal Holloway, University of London, UK) that help the
student unpack the play's themes, language, structure and
production history to date.
This edited book documents practices of learning-oriented language
assessment through practitioner research and research syntheses.
Learning-oriented language assessment refers to language assessment
strategies that capitalise on learner differences and their
relationships with the learning environments. In other words,
learners are placed at the centre of the assessment process and its
outcomes. The book features 17 chapters on learning-oriented
language assessment practices in China, Brazil, Turkey, Norway, UK,
Canada, Japan, Saudi Arabia, and Spain. Chapters include teachers'
reflections and practical suggestions. This book will appeal to
researchers, teacher educators, and language teachers who are
interested in advancing research and practice of learning-oriented
language assessment.
Place, Setting, Perspective examines the films of the Italian
filmmaker, Nanni Moretti, from a fresh viewpoint, employing the
increasingly significant research area of space within a filmic
text. The book is conceived with the awareness that space cannot be
studied only in aesthetic or narrative terms: social, political,
and cultural aspects of narrated spaces are equally important if a
thorough appraisal is to be achieved of an oeuvre such as
Moretti's, which is profoundly associated with socio-political
commentary and analysis. After an exploration of various existing
frameworks of narrative space in film, the book offers a particular
definition of the term based on the notions of Place, Setting, and
Perspective. Place relates to the physical aspect of narrative
space and specifically involves cityscapes, landscapes, interiors,
and exteriors in the real world. Setting concerns genre
characteristics of narrative space, notably its differentiated use
in melodrama, detective stories, fantasy narratives, and gender
based scenarios. Perspective encompasses the point of view taken
optically by the camera which supports the standpoint of Moretti's
personal philosophy expressed through the aesthetic aspects which
he employs to create narrative space. The study is based on a close
textual analysis of Moretti's eleven major feature films to date,
using the formal film language of mise-en-scene, cinematography,
editing, and sound. The aim is to show how Moretti selects,
organizes, constructs, assembles, and manipulates the many elements
of narrative space into an entire work of art, to enable meanings
and pleasures for the spectator.
Fiery Temporalities in Theatre and Performance: The Initiation of
History takes up the urgent need to think about temporality and its
relationship to history in new ways, focusing on theatre and
performance as mediums through which politically innovative
temporalities, divorced from historical processionism and the
future, are inaugurated. Wickstrom is guided by three temporal
concepts: the new present, the penultimate, and kairos, as
developed by Alain Badiou, Giorgio Agamben, and Antonio Negri
respectively. She works across a field of performance that includes
play texts by Aime Cesaire and C.L.R. James, and performances from
Ni'Ja Whitson to Cassils, the Gob Squad to William Kentridge and
African colonial revolts, Hofesh Schechter to Forced Entertainment
to Andrew Schneider and Omar Rajeh. Along the way she also engages
with Walter Benjamin, black international and radical thought and
performance, Bruno Latour, Stefano Harney and Fred Moten's
logistics and the hold, and accelerationism. Representing a
significant contribution to the growing interest in temporality in
Theatre and Performance Studies, the book offers alternatives to
what have been prevailing temporal preoccupations in those fields.
Countering investments in phenomenology, finitude, ghosting,
repetition, and return, Wickstrom argues that theatre and
performance can create a fiery sense of how to change time and
thereby nominate a new possibility for what it means to live.
Hamlet is the most often produced play in the western literary
canon, and a fertile global source for film adaptation. Samuel
Crowl, a noted scholar of Shakespeare on film, unpacks the process
of adapting from text to screen through concentrating on two
sharply contrasting film versions of Hamlet by Laurence Olivier
(1948) and Kenneth Branagh (1996). The films' socio-political
contexts are explored, and the importance of their screenplay, film
score, setting, cinematography and editing examined. Offering an
analysis of two of the most important figures in the history of
film adaptations of Shakespeare, this study seeks to understand a
variety of cinematic approaches to translating Shakespeare's
"words, words, words" into film's particular grammar and rhetoric
This international collection brings together scientists, scholars
and artist-researchers to explore the cognition of memory through
the performing arts and examine artistic strategies that target
cognitive processes of memory. The strongly embodied and highly
trained memory systems of performing artists render artistic
practice a rich context for understanding how memory is formed,
utilized and adapted through interaction with others, instruments
and environments. Using experimental, interpretive and
Practice-as-Research methods that bridge disciplines, the authors
provide overview chapters and case studies of subjects such as: *
collectively and environmentally distributed memory in the
performing arts; * autobiographical memory triggers in performance
creation and reception; * the journey from learning to memory in
performance training; * the relationship between memory, awareness
and creative spontaneity, and * memorization and embodied or
structural analysis of scores and scripts. This volume provides an
unprecedented resource for scientists, scholars, artists, teachers
and students looking for insight into the cognition of memory in
the arts, strategies of learning and performance, and
interdisciplinary research methodology.
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Fame
(Hardcover)
Mirjana Nikolovski
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R751
Discovery Miles 7 510
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This is a nice book to read about several times when people
believed they were famous and some people really are famous.
Personally I was always intrigued by The Life Styles of the Rich
and famous. That was a show along time ago that I watched with my
mom dad and sister. It was fun but I would always feel weird so I
would go down stairs but I sure did like that fountain!
The shift in temporal modalities of Romantic Theatre was the
consequence of internal as well as external developments:
internally, the playwright was liberated from the old imperative of
"Unity of Time" and the expectation that the events of the play
must not exceed the hours of a single day; externally, the new
social and cultural conformance to the time-keeping schedules of
labour and business that had become more urgent with the industrial
revolution. In reviewing the theatre of the Romantic era, this
monograph draws attention to the ways in which theatre reflected
the pervasive impact of increased temporal urgency in social and
cultural behaviour. The contribution this book makes to the study
of drama in the early nineteenth century is a renewed emphasis on
time as a prominent element in Romantic dramaturgy, and a
reappraisal of the extensive experimentation on how time
functioned.
Fortune's Fool Here is William Shakespeare's brilliant play the
Tragedy of Romeo and Juliet, set in Verona during a feud between
the Capulets and the Montagues. Romeo, a Montague, falls
desperately in love with Juliet, a Capulet, and the two secretly
marry. Lyrical and poignant, this immortal play of star-crossed
lovers will stay with you long after the play ends. 'Tis but thy
name that is my enemy. Thou art thyself, though not a Montague.
What's Montague? it is nor hand, nor foot, Nor arm, nor face, nor
any other part Belonging to a man. O, be some other name What's in
a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as
sweet.
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