|
Showing 1 - 3 of
3 matches in All Departments
Stillness in Motion in the Seventeenth Century Theatre provides a
comprehensive examination of this aesthetic theory. The author
investigates this aesthetic history as a form of artistic creation,
philosophical investigation, a way of representing and manipulating
ideas about gender and a way of acknowledging, reinforcing and
making a critique of social values for the still and moving, the
permanent and elapsing. The book's analysis covers the entire
seventeenth-century with chapters on the work of Ben Jonson, John
Milton, the pamphletheatre, Aphra Behn, John Vanbrugh and Jeremy
Collier and will be of interest to scholars in the areas of
literary and performance studies.
Stillness in Motion in the Seventeenth Century Theatre provides a comprehensive examination of this aesthetic theory. The author investigates this aesthetic history as a form of artistic creation, philosophical investigation, a way of representing and manipulating ideas about gender and a way of acknowledging, reinforcing and making a critique of social values for the still and moving, the permanent and elapsing. The book's analysis covers the entire seventeenth-century with chapters on the work of Ben Jonson, John Milton, the pamphletheatre, Aphra Behn, John Vanbrugh and Jeremy Collier and will be of interest to scholars in the areas of literary and performance studies. eBook available with sample pages: 020338069X
Itinerant Spectator/Itinerant Spectacle moves across the landscape
of European performance in the late 20th and early 21st centuries,
recounting performance in circulation across national borders and
across the itinerant bodies of spectators who travel to meet
performances that travel. Itinerant Spectator/Itinerant Spectacle
suggests spectating is a practice - an act of interpretation
engaged in more than simply receiving the affects of a performance,
a companion practice to the making of performance. The work forms a
part of Skantze's ongoing explorations of what she terms the
'epistemology of practice as research.' IS/IS theorizes spectating
as a practice that extends beyond the theatre, as a practice of
writing as recollecting (and recollecting as writing) at the center
of what has been called "criticism." The book grounds spectatorship
in the subjective, embodied, differenced practice of spectating not
from a fixed location or standpoint but from a ground that
constantly shifts, that is, from the ground of the roving
positionalities of the "itinerate spectator." Following Walter
Benjamin, for example, Skantze importantly adopts the privileges of
the flaneur as a feminist and rather queer project, one that
refuses to be tied to the minor position, to that of the impossible
"flaneuse." The methodology of the book takes inspiration from the
writings of W.G. Sebald and his employment of something Skantze
describes as "a staging of memory," a way to offer the reader an
example of how memory works in the midst of a description of a
particular recollection. This construction invites the
reader/participant to 'discover, ' to 'remember' alongside the
writer. Further, this methodology invites the reader to incorporate
her/his own ideas and memories of the practice of spectating
through an openness in the language of remembering and description.
Individual sections of the book demonstrate spectating as itinerant
'on the job training' in various modes of reception. Topics
include: the idea of reparation in performance about nations, the
past and injustice; the power of sound and the intricacies of
seeing/hearing performance in many languages; the architectural
information absorbed by the spectator and its role in fashioning
story; the shifts made in spectating at festivals between theatre
and dance; and the political consequences and traps of mobility and
immobility.
|
|