Feminist Theatre Practice: A Handbook is a helpful, practical guide to theatre-making which explores the different ways of representing gender. Best-selling author, Elaine Aston, takes the reader through the various stages of making feminist theatre- from warming up, through workshopped exploration
Performing the Wound: Practicing a Feminist Theatre of Becoming
✍ Scribed by Niki Tulk
- Publisher
- Routledge
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 193
- Series
- Routledge Advances in Theatre & Performance Studies
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
This book offers a matrixial, feminist-centered analysis of trauma and performance, through examining the work of three artists: Ann Hamilton, Renée Green, and Cecilia Vicuña.
Each artist engages in a multi-media, or “combination” performance practice; this includes the use of site, embodied performance, material elements, film, and writing. Each case study involves traumatic content, including the legacy of slavery, child sexual abuse and environmental degradation; each artist constructs an aesthetic milieu that invites rather than immerses—this allows an audience to have agency, as well as multiple pathways into their engagement with the art. The author Niki Tulk suggests that these works facilitate an audience-performance relationship based on the concept of ethical witnessing/wit(h)nessing, in which viewers are not positioned as voyeurs, nor made to risk re-traumatization by being forced to view traumatic events re-played on stage. This approach also allows agency to the art itself, in that an ethical space is created where the art is not objectified or looked at—but joined with. Foundational to this investigation are the writings of Bracha L. Ettinger, Jill Bennett and Diana Taylor—particularly Ettinger’s concepts of the matrixial, carriance and border-linking. These artists and scholars present a capacity to expand and articulate answers to questions regarding how to make performance that remains compelling and truthful to the trauma experience, but not re-traumatizing.
This study will be of great interest to students and scholars of performance studies, art history, visual arts, feminist studies, theatre, film, performance art, postcolonialism, rhetoric and writing.
✦ Table of Contents
Cover
Half Title
Series Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of figures
Acknowledgments
1. Introduction
2. Reframing Performance within Trauma Studies Literature
3. The Textured Language of Rupture: Multimedia Installations by Ann Hamilton
4. Dreaming In-Between: Landscape, Trauma and Meaning-Making in the Work of Renée Green
5. Weaving Lament: Cecilia Vicuña’s Poetry in Performance
6. Conclusion
Index
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
A valuable, provoking, important addition to any theatre scholar or practitioner's library, especially since feminist theory is a relative newcomer to the world of theatre.
This book is a timely contribution to the emerging field of the aurality of theatre and looks in particular at the interrogation and problematisation of theatre sound(s). Both approaches are represented in the idea of ‘noise’ which we understand both as a concrete sonic entity and a metaphor or theo
<p>This work is a timely contribution to the debates surrounding feminism, theatre and performance. The excellent, cross-generational mix of theatre scholars and practitioners engaging in lively, cutting-edge debates on critical topics make this essential reading for students and scholars in Theatre
Palgrave Macmillan, 2006. — 258 с. Язык английский.<div class="bb-sep"></div>Феминистские будущие? Театр, актерская игра, теория. <br/> Feminist Futures and the Possibilities of ‘We’?<br/>Elaine Aston and Geraldine (Gerry) Harris<br/> Navigating Postfeminism: Writing Out of the Box <br/>Janelle Rein