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This edited collection brings together essays presenting an
interdisciplinary dialogue between theatre and performance and the
fields of care ethics, care studies, health and social care. The
book advances our understanding of performance as a mode of care,
challenging existing debates in this area by re-thinking the caring
encounter as a performed, embodied experience and interrogating the
boundaries between care practice and performance. Through an
examination of a wide range of different care performances drawn
from interdisciplinary and international settings, the book
interrogates how performance might be understood as caring or
uncaring, careless or careful, and correlatively how care can be
conceptualised as artful, aesthetic, authentic or even 'fake' and
'staged'. -- .
Providing one of the first critically sustained engagements with
the new forms of verbatim and testimonial theatre that emerged in
the late 1990s and early 2000s, this book examines what
distinguishes verbatim theatre from the more established
documentary theatre traditions developed initially by Peter Weiss,
Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator. Examining a wide range of
verbatim and testimonial plays from around the world, this book
looks beyond the discourses of the real that have tended to
dominate scholarship in this area and instead argues that this kind
of theatre engages in acts of truth telling. Through its analysis
of a range of international plays from UK, Germany, America,
Australia and South Africa, the book explores theatre’s
dramaturgical interrogation of testimony and how the act of
witnessing itself is reconfigured when relocated outside of the
psychoanalytic frame and positioned as contributing to a
decolonisation of testimony. -- .
Providing one of the first critically sustained engagements with
the new forms of verbatim and testimonial theatre that emerged in
the late 1990s and early 2000s, this book examines what
distinguishes verbatim theatre from the more established
documentary theatre traditions developed initially by Peter Weiss,
Bertolt Brecht and Erwin Piscator. Examining a wide range of
verbatim and testimonial plays from around the world, this book
looks beyond the discourses of the real that have tended to
dominate scholarship in this area and instead argues that this kind
of theatre engages in acts of truth telling. Through its analysis
of a range of international plays from UK, Germany, America,
Australia and South Africa, the book explores theatre's
dramaturgical interrogation of testimony and how the act of
witnessing itself is reconfigured when relocated outside of the
psychoanalytic frame and positioned as contributing to a
decolonisation of testimony. -- .
This edited collection brings together essays presenting an
interdisciplinary dialogue between theatre and performance and the
fields of care ethics, care studies, health and social care. The
book advances our understanding of performance as a mode of care,
challenging existing debates in this area by re-thinking the caring
encounter as a performed, embodied experience and interrogating the
boundaries between care practice and performance. Through an
examination of a wide range of different care performances drawn
from interdisciplinary and international settings, the book
interrogates how performance might be understood as caring or
uncaring, careless or careful, and correlatively how care can be
conceptualised as artful, aesthetic, authentic or even 'fake' and
'staged'. -- .
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