The category of theatrical character has been swiftly dismissed in the
academic reception of no-longer-dramatic texts and performances.
However, claims on the dissolution of character narrowly demarcate
what a subject is and how it may appear. This volume unmoors theatre
scholarship from the regulatory ideals of liberal humanism, stretching
the notion of character to encompass and illuminate otherwise
unaccounted-for subjects, aesthetic strategies and political gestures
in recent theatre works. To this aim, contemporary philosophical
theories of subjectivation, European theatre studies, and
experimental, script-led work produced in Britain since the late 1990s
are mobilised as discussants on the question of subjectivity. Four
contemporary playtexts and their performances are examined in depth:
Sarah Kane’s Crave and 4.48 Psychosis, Ed Thomas’s Stone City Blue
and Tim Crouch’s ENGLAND. Through these case studies,
Delgado-García demonstrates alternative ways of engaging
theoretically with character, and elucidating a range of subjective
figures beyond identity and individuality. Alongside these analyses,
the book traces a large body of work that has experimented with speech
attribution since the early twentieth-century. This is a timely
contribution to contemporary theatre scholarship, which demonstrates
that character remains a malleable and politically-salient notion in
which understandings of subjectivity are still being negotiated.
Les mer
Aesthetics, Politics, Subjectivity
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9783110411225
Publisert
2015
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
De Gruyter
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter