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The Applied Theatre Reader is the first book to bring together new
case studies of practice by leading practitioners and academics in
the field and beyond, with classic source texts from writers such
as Noam Chomsky, bell hooks, Mikhail Bakhtin, Augusto Boal and
Chantal Mouffe. This new edition brings the field fully up to date
with the breadth of applied theatre practice in the twenty-first
century, adding essays on playback theatre, digital technology,
work with indigenous practitioners, inter-generational practice,
school projects and contributors from South America, Australia and
New Zealand. The Reader divides the field into key themes, inviting
critical interrogation of issues in applied theatre whilst also
acknowledging the multi-disciplinary nature of its subject,
crossing fields like theatre in educational settings, prison
theatre, community performance, theatre in conflict resolution,
interventionist theatre and theatre for development. A new lexicon
of Applied Theatre and further reading for every part will equip
readers with the ideal tools for studying this broad and varied
field. This collection of critical thought and practice is
essential to those studying or participating in the performing arts
as a means for positive change.
The Applied Theatre Reader is the first book to bring together new
case studies of practice by leading practitioners and academics in
the field and beyond, with classic source texts from writers such
as Noam Chomsky, bell hooks, Mikhail Bakhtin, Augusto Boal and
Chantal Mouffe. This new edition brings the field fully up to date
with the breadth of applied theatre practice in the twenty-first
century, adding essays on playback theatre, digital technology,
work with indigenous practitioners, inter-generational practice,
school projects and contributors from South America, Australia and
New Zealand. The Reader divides the field into key themes, inviting
critical interrogation of issues in applied theatre whilst also
acknowledging the multi-disciplinary nature of its subject,
crossing fields like theatre in educational settings, prison
theatre, community performance, theatre in conflict resolution,
interventionist theatre and theatre for development. A new lexicon
of Applied Theatre and further reading for every part will equip
readers with the ideal tools for studying this broad and varied
field. This collection of critical thought and practice is
essential to those studying or participating in the performing arts
as a means for positive change.
The Wolf Man's Magic Word reopens the examination of the "Wolf
Man," a Russian emigre who was Freud's patient and who wrote his
own memoirs. Nicolas Abraham and Maria Torok's work is at once the
account of the Wolf Man's psychological inventions, a reading of
his dreams and symptoms, and a critique of basic Freudian notions.
This volume is a superb introduction to the richness and
originality of Abraham and Torok's approach to psychoanalysis and
their psychoanalytic approach to literature. Abraham and Torok
advocate a form of psychoanalysis that insists on the particularity
of any individual's life story, the specificity of texts, and the
singularity of historical situations. In what is both a critique
and an extension of Freud, they develop interpretive strategies
with powerful implications for clinicians, literary theorists,
feminists, philosophers, and all others interested in the uses and
limits of psychoanalysis.
Central to their approach is a general theory of psychic
concealment, a poetics of hiding. Whether in a clinical setting or
a literary text, they search out the unspeakable secret as a
symptom of devastating trauma revealed only in linguistic or
behavioral encodings. Their view of trauma provides the linchpin
for new psychic and linguistic structures such as the
"transgenerational phantom," an undisclosed family secret handed
down to an unwitting descendant, and the intra-psychic secret or
"crypt," which entombs an unspeakable but consummated desire.
Throughout, Abraham and Torok seek to restore communication with
those intimate recesses of the mind which are, for one reason or
another, denied expression.
Classics of French theory and practice, the essays in volume one
include four previously uncollected works by Maria Torok. Nicholas
Rand supplies a substantial introductory essay and commentary
throughout. Abraham and Torok's theories of fractured meaning and
their search for coherence in the face of discontinuity and
disruption have the potential to reshape not only psychoanalysisbut
all disciplines concerned with issues of textual, oral, or visual
interpretation.
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