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This study explores the ways in which playtexts have evolved in
relation to the sociocultural and cognitive conditions of a
mediatized age, and how they, in form and content, respond to this
environment and open up new critical possibilities in text and
performance. The study combines theatre and media theory through
the innovative concept of 'mediatized dramaturgy' and offers
conceptual reflections on the ways in which a playtext negotiates
the new reality of contemporary culture. The book scrutinizes the
form of playtexts and works through the exchange between text and
performance by exploring contemporary works such as Simon
Stephens's Pornography, Caryl Churchill's Love and Information, and
David Greig's The Yes/No Plays, and their selected productions.
Offering a pioneering intervention that expands discussions about
the mediatization of theatre, and new playwriting, Mediatized
Dramaturgyproposes areas for discussion that appeal to researchers,
audiences and practitioners with an interest in the sub-field of
media and performance, and British and North American drama and
theatre. Media technologies and their socio-cultural repercussions
have increasingly influenced theatre, particularly since the
ubiquitous prevalence of digital technologies from the 1990s
onwards. Consequently, new modes such as digital and intermedial
theatre have come to populate and transform the theatre practice
and scholarship. In this changing theatrical landscape, what has
happened to plays in the historically text-oriented British
theatre? How has playtext changed in an age of theatre marked by
mediatization and its possibilities?
This study explores the ways in which playtexts have evolved in
relation to the sociocultural and cognitive conditions of a
mediatized age, and how they, in form and content, respond to this
environment and open up new critical possibilities in text and
performance. The study combines theatre and media theory through
the innovative concept of 'mediatized dramaturgy' and offers
conceptual reflections on the ways in which a playtext negotiates
the new reality of contemporary culture. The book scrutinizes the
form of playtexts and works through the exchange between text and
performance by exploring contemporary works such as Simon
Stephens's Pornography, Caryl Churchill's Love and Information, and
David Greig's The Yes/No Plays, and their selected productions.
Offering a pioneering intervention that expands discussions about
the mediatization of theatre, and new playwriting, Mediatized
Dramaturgyproposes areas for discussion that appeal to researchers,
audiences and practitioners with an interest in the sub-field of
media and performance, and British and North American drama and
theatre. Media technologies and their socio-cultural repercussions
have increasingly influenced theatre, particularly since the
ubiquitous prevalence of digital technologies from the 1990s
onwards. Consequently, new modes such as digital and intermedial
theatre have come to populate and transform the theatre practice
and scholarship. In this changing theatrical landscape, what has
happened to plays in the historically text-oriented British
theatre? How has playtext changed in an age of theatre marked by
mediatization and its possibilities?
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