Through an examination of a range of performance works ranging from Jean Cocteau’s ballet The Eiffel Tower Wedding Party (1921) to Julie Taymor’s monumental production of Spider-Man: Turn off the Dark (2010) and Mexican playwright Isaac Gomez’s La Ruta(2018), Staging Technology asks what becomes visible when we encounter plays, operas, and musicals that are themselves about fraught human/machine interfaces. What can theatrical production tell us about the way technology functions as an element of ideology and power in narrative drama? About the limits of the human? Staging Technology bridges the divide between the technical practices of theatre production and critical, theoretical approaches to interpreting drama to examine the way dramatic theatre’s technologies are shaped by larger historical, ideological, and economic forces. At the same time, it examines how those technologies themselves have influenced 20th and 21st-century playwrights’, composers’, and librettists’ choice of subject matter for staged representation. Examining performance works from the modernist and post-modern European and American canon of drama, opera, and performance art including works by Eugène Ionesco, Samuel Beckett, Heiner Müller, Sophie Treadwell, Harold Pinter, Tristan Tzara, Jean Cocteau, Arthur Miller, Robert Pinsky, John Adams and Alice Goodman, Staging Technology transforms how we think about the interrelationship between theatre practice, performance, narrative drama, and text. In it Craig N. Owens synthesizes approaches to interpretation and practice from disparate realms, offering insights into over-arching ways of making meaning that are illustrated through focused and innovative readings of individual works for the dramatic stage. Staging Technology provides a new and transformative paradigm for thinking about dramatic literature, the practices of representational theatre production, and the historical and social contexts they inhabit.
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Introduction: Staging TechnologyChapter One: Avant-Garde Assemblages: Tristan Tzara, Jean Cocteau, and Eugène IonescoChapter Two: Machineries of Nostalgia and American Modernity: Sophie Treadwell, Elmer Rice, and Arthur MillerChapter Three: Alienating Devices: Bertolt Brecht & Kurt Weill, John Adams & Alice Goodman, and Don DeLilloChapter Four: Machineries of Constraint: Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter, and Patrick MarberChapter Five: Post-Human Recursivity: Heiner Müller, Julie Taymor, The Transversal Theater Company, and Tod Machover & Robert PinskyCoda: Beyond the Western Canon: The Invisible ApparatusNotesReferencesIndex
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Staging Technology examines performance works in the European and American canon and beyond from 1920-2018 that represent complex or fraught human encounters with technology and occupy the intersection of technology and media studies, theatre studies, and drama studies.
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Considers 20th- and 21st-century theatre’s media - lighting, design, and other stage technologies - as sites of meaning-making within narrative and representational drama, not just as technical apparatus for producing effects
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781350196704
Publisert
2022-10-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Methuen Drama
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Aldersnivå
U, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
296
Forfatter