Theater after Film
Autor Professor Martin Harriesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 23 mai 2025
In Theater after Film, Martin Harries argues that after 1945, as cinema became omnipresent in popular culture, theater had to respond to cinema’s hegemony. Theater couldn’t break that hegemony, but it could provide a zone of contestation. Theater made film’s domination of the cultural field visible through hyperbole, refusal, and other strategies, thereby unsettling its power. Postwar theatrical experiment, Harries shows, often channeled and represented film’s mass cultural force, while knowing that it could never possess that force. Throughout the book, Harries brings critical theory into contact with theories of performance. Although Theater after Film treats the theatrical work of many figures, its central focus falls on Tennessee Williams, Samuel Beckett, and Adrienne Kennedy. Discussions of these dramatists consider their ways of addressing spectators, the politics of race between film and theater, and the place of the theatrical apparatus. Readings of these central figures in twentieth-century theater exemplify the book’s historical engagement with the media surround that drama confronted. This confrontation, Harries shows, was central to the development of some of the most continually compelling postwar drama.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780226838717
ISBN-10: 0226838714
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 4 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
ISBN-10: 0226838714
Pagini: 304
Ilustrații: 4 halftones
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:First Edition
Editura: University of Chicago Press
Colecția University of Chicago Press
Notă biografică
Martin Harries is professor of comparative literature at the University of California, Irvine. He is the author of Forgetting Lot’s Wife: On Destructive Spectatorship and Scare Quotes from Shakespeare: Marx, Keynes, and the Language of Reenchantment.
Cuprins
1. Preface
2. Incommunication
3. Theater/Media
4. Demolition of a Theater (1901)
5. Residual Becomes Emergent
6. Medium/Media/Mediation in Reverse
7. Theater/Film
8. Apparatus
9. Williams, Beckett, Kennedy
10. Walter Benjamin’s Work of Art Essay
11. Benjamin’s Medium
12. Modernism: Shaw, Lorca, Brecht
13. Participation in Postwar Theater
14. Artaud’s Voice against Radio
15. Publics
16. Handke’s Offending the Audience
Tennessee Williams
17. Williams’s Material
18. Learning Sexual Violence with Tennessee Williams, or Streetcar in Pictures
19. Lead Belly’s Guitar and Williams’s Counterpublics
Samuel Beckett
20. Beckett, Cinema, Politics
21. Film and Its Audiences
22. Catastrophe: Fixing the Audience
23. Endgame, Postwar Mass Culture, and Forms of Address
24. Beckett, the Proscenium, Media
25. Product Placement
Adrienne Kennedy
26. Theater after Hollywood
27. A Movie Star in 1976
28. The Author as Produced: Hollywood/Jim Crow
29. Diary of Lights
30. Afterword/After Theater
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index
2. Incommunication
3. Theater/Media
4. Demolition of a Theater (1901)
5. Residual Becomes Emergent
6. Medium/Media/Mediation in Reverse
7. Theater/Film
8. Apparatus
9. Williams, Beckett, Kennedy
10. Walter Benjamin’s Work of Art Essay
11. Benjamin’s Medium
12. Modernism: Shaw, Lorca, Brecht
13. Participation in Postwar Theater
14. Artaud’s Voice against Radio
15. Publics
16. Handke’s Offending the Audience
Tennessee Williams
17. Williams’s Material
18. Learning Sexual Violence with Tennessee Williams, or Streetcar in Pictures
19. Lead Belly’s Guitar and Williams’s Counterpublics
Samuel Beckett
20. Beckett, Cinema, Politics
21. Film and Its Audiences
22. Catastrophe: Fixing the Audience
23. Endgame, Postwar Mass Culture, and Forms of Address
24. Beckett, the Proscenium, Media
25. Product Placement
Adrienne Kennedy
26. Theater after Hollywood
27. A Movie Star in 1976
28. The Author as Produced: Hollywood/Jim Crow
29. Diary of Lights
30. Afterword/After Theater
Acknowledgments
Bibliography
Index
Recenzii
“An intellectually thrilling account of postwar theater’s aesthetic enmeshment in—and contestation of—mass media. Harries’s writing is unparalleled in its combination of rigorous historicism, searching theoretical inquiry, and brilliant close reading. In a series of illuminating essays, Harries shows how the very particularities that have consigned theater artists to distinct canons actually form a ‘dialectical sequence’ of profound investigations into modern spectatorship. Anyone who cares about what stage plays can be in a society dominated by other media ought to read Theater after Film.”
“Theater after Film is that rare thing: a book that achieves a decisive theoretical intervention by means of the most scrupulous critical attention to its chosen historical and aesthetic materials. Harries’s writing is elegant and precise, wrought with extraordinary care from extensive study and deep thought. His work offers readers a richly historicized understanding of theatrical responses to the media culture inaugurated by film.”
“There is nothing in studies of postwar theater to match the theoretical elegance of this book and the lucidity of its critical address. Harries’s readings, like his reflections on his methodology, are as scrupulous as they are generous. Each essay offers both intricate analyses of particular works and revelatory conclusions about theater’s potential as a site of aesthetic and ideological contestation. This book is transformative. You read it, and the sky lights up.”