Theatre in the Expanded Field: Seven Approaches to Performance: Methuen Drama Engage
Autor Alan Readen Limba Engleză Paperback – 4 dec 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408184950
ISBN-10: 1408184958
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 50
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Methuen Drama Engage
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1408184958
Pagini: 296
Ilustrații: 50
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Methuen Drama
Seria Methuen Drama Engage
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
A masterclass in performance studies from a lifetime in theatre and in scholarship and teaching
Notă biografică
Alan Read is Professor of Theatre at King's College, London, UK. He was Director of the Council of Europe Workshop on Theatre and Communities, and Rotherhithe Theatre Workshop in the Docklands area of South East London, in the 1980s, worked as a freelance writer in Barcelona and as Director of Talks at the Institute of Contemporary Arts in the 1990s and was the first Professor of Theatre at Roehampton University and then King's College London between 1997 and the present. He is the author of Theatre & Everyday Life: An Ethics of Performance (1993) and Theatre, Intimacy & Engagement: The Last Human Venue (2008). He is the founding consultant editor of Performance Research journal.
Cuprins
To my ReadersPreliminaryThe Performance GeneAbandoned Practices & Endangered UsesTheatre in the Expanded FieldI Pre-Historical & Archaeological 38,550 BCEII Pastoral & Anthropological 429 BCEIII Theological & Historical 1613IV Digital & Technological 1720V Psychological & Legal 1889VI Social & Sensible 1964VII Tactical & Critical 2012EndnotesBibliographyIndexAcknowledgements
Recenzii
Read's discursive, unstintingly intelligent, rigorous, and spirited book is nothing less than necessary reading for anyone who cares about what theatre is, and can be . . . [This] beautifully researched, thoughtful dream of a book asks its readers in turn to dream what kind of theatre, and what kind of approaches to its making, we dare as practitioners, scholars, readers, and spectators ... I use the word 'dream' to describe this book not as a soft, sentimental noun but rather as a way to reflect how the book operates on the reader's mind. It stops to dream. It asks us to dream. It provides some paths for us to consider, and space to wonder if there might be new paths left to forge
In establishing his "seven approaches to performance," Read uses Richard Southern's The Seven Ages of the Theatre (1962) as a template, providing rich, eclectic studies of performance, pre- to postmodern. Each of the approaches reads like a performance monologue, teasing out the thesis that performance, "in the expanded field" of all human interaction, serves as a cultural irritant, celebrating contingency and playfulness as essential to the human animal. Theoretically sophisticated, academically challenging, and often very entertaining, this book will engage, irritate, and amuse the intellectually scrupulous and playfully inclined. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, professionals.
[This] book is convincing and enlivening precisely because, in his remarkable mental fluidity, Read is able, page-by-page, to enact the approach he is advocating.
In Theatre in the Expanded Field, Alan Read elucidates a vast collection of manifestations of performance at its most molecular. His flawless insight and persistent archeology reveal the intricate palimpsests at work in the architecture of building, book, image, or idea. His latest masterful textual performance - a book that reads like a spirited monologue that spans the centuries - offers an intellectual adventure for the reader that will only fortify Read's well-deserved reputation as an indispensible and galvanic life force of contemporary performance philosophy.
Like the course of a long and satisfying conversation, this book can take surprising twists and turns. Read moves unpredictably between and among contemporary theatre and performance practices, philosophy/theory, and prehistorical and historical artworks in order to lure one of his favorite animals - the human - into play. With its distinct seven generations - seven distinct essays - this book will become a kind of signature book in Read's unique method and provoke future scholars into new directions, yet to be thought.
Magnificent. Alan Read's new book explores the distinctions and relations between 'theatre' and 'performance' which lie at the heart of most contemporary cultural discourses, doing so in expansive, enlightening and extraordinary ways. For those of us immersed in the lived realities of such distinctions and relations, this book is absolutely essential reading.
In establishing his "seven approaches to performance," Read uses Richard Southern's The Seven Ages of the Theatre (1962) as a template, providing rich, eclectic studies of performance, pre- to postmodern. Each of the approaches reads like a performance monologue, teasing out the thesis that performance, "in the expanded field" of all human interaction, serves as a cultural irritant, celebrating contingency and playfulness as essential to the human animal. Theoretically sophisticated, academically challenging, and often very entertaining, this book will engage, irritate, and amuse the intellectually scrupulous and playfully inclined. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Graduate students, researchers, faculty, professionals.
[This] book is convincing and enlivening precisely because, in his remarkable mental fluidity, Read is able, page-by-page, to enact the approach he is advocating.
In Theatre in the Expanded Field, Alan Read elucidates a vast collection of manifestations of performance at its most molecular. His flawless insight and persistent archeology reveal the intricate palimpsests at work in the architecture of building, book, image, or idea. His latest masterful textual performance - a book that reads like a spirited monologue that spans the centuries - offers an intellectual adventure for the reader that will only fortify Read's well-deserved reputation as an indispensible and galvanic life force of contemporary performance philosophy.
Like the course of a long and satisfying conversation, this book can take surprising twists and turns. Read moves unpredictably between and among contemporary theatre and performance practices, philosophy/theory, and prehistorical and historical artworks in order to lure one of his favorite animals - the human - into play. With its distinct seven generations - seven distinct essays - this book will become a kind of signature book in Read's unique method and provoke future scholars into new directions, yet to be thought.
Magnificent. Alan Read's new book explores the distinctions and relations between 'theatre' and 'performance' which lie at the heart of most contemporary cultural discourses, doing so in expansive, enlightening and extraordinary ways. For those of us immersed in the lived realities of such distinctions and relations, this book is absolutely essential reading.