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Where do we find the dead? Do the dead appear in our dreams? What
is it like to play dead? This book is an exciting exploration of
the relationship between death and play in performance. Exploring a
range of artists and creative disciplines that remember, personify
and re-imagine the dead, it playfully unpacks the psychoanalytic
concepts of the Death Drive, Desire and the Uncanny as a way of
thinking about performance. Embodying the Dead draws on work of
Gary Winters and Claire Hind and the various qualities of deadness
found in their projects. The authors' work includes live art,
theatre, installation, Super 8mm film, walking arts practice and
durational performance. This book includes scripts and scores of
their performances, original creative texts, interviews with
internationally renowned artists and a series of practice-led
research tasks to support readers creating their own imaginative
performance work. Rich in creative and critical content, this book
is ideal for students of drama, theatre and performance studies who
have an interest in devised theatre, theatre making, writing for
performance and intermedial practice.
The seaside holiday and the seaside resort are two of England's
greatest exports to the world. Since the early 18th century, when
some of the wealthiest people first sought improved health by
bathing in saltwater, the lure of the sea has been a fundamental
part of the British way of life, and millions of people still head
to the coast each year. Margate has an important place in the story
of seaside holidays. It vies with Scarborough, Whitby and Brighton
for the title of England's first seaside resort, and it was the
first to offer sea-water baths to visitors. Margate can also claim
other firsts, including the first Georgian square built at a
seaside resort (Cecil Square), the first substantial seaside
development outside the footprint of an historic coastal town, the
site of the world's first sea-bathing hospital, and, as a result of
its location along the Thames from London, the first popular resort
frequented by middle- and lower-middle-class holidaymakers. It is
unlikely that Margate will ever attract the vast numbers of
visitors that flocked there in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
However, with growing concerns about the environmental effects of
air travel and a continuing awareness of the threat of excessive
exposure to the sun, the English seaside holiday may enjoy some
form of revival. If Margate finds ways to renew itself while
retaining its historic identity, it may once again become a vibrant
destination for holidays, as well as being an attractive place for
people to live and work.
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