Tag: Theatricality

Early Modern Theatricality


Free Download Henry S. Turner, "Early Modern Theatricality "
English | ISBN: 0198817517 | 2018 | 638 pages | PDF | 40 MB
The original essays in Oxford Twenty-First Century Approaches to Literature mean to provoke rather than reassure, to challenge rather than codify. Instead of summarizing existing knowledge, scholars working in the field aim at opening fresh discussion; instead of emphasizing settled consensus, they direct their readers to areas of enlivened and unresolved debate.

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A Dutch Republican Baroque Theatricality, Dramatization, Moment and Event


Free Download Frans-Willem Korsten, "A Dutch Republican Baroque: Theatricality, Dramatization, Moment and Event "
English | ISBN: 9462982120 | 2017 | 248 pages | PDF | 1416 KB
In the Dutch Republic, in its Baroque forms of art, two aesthetic formal modes, theatre and drama, were dynamically related to two political concepts, event and moment. The Dutch version of the Baroque is characterised by a fascination with this world regarded as one possibility out of a plurality of potential worlds. It is this fascination that explains the coincidence in the Dutch Republic, strange at first sight, of Baroque exuberance, irregularity, paradox, and vertigo with scientific rigor, regularity, mathematical logic, and rational distance. In giving a new historical perspective on the Baroque as a specifically Dutch republican one, this study also offers a new and systematic approach towards the interactions among the notions of theatricality, dramatisation, moment, and event: concepts that are currently at the centre of philosophical and political debates but the modern articulation of which can best be considered in the explorations of history and world in the Dutch Republic.

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Actors in the Audience. Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian


Free Download Actors in the Audience. Theatricality and Doublespeak from Nero to Hadrian By Bartsch, Shadi
1998 | 320 Pages | ISBN: 0674003578 | PDF | 5 MB
When Nero took the stage, the audience played along – or else. The drama thus enacted, whether in the theatre proper or in the political arena, unfolds in all its complexity in "Actors in the Audience". This is a book about language, theatricality and empire – about how the Roman emperor dramatized his rule and how his subordinates in turn staged their response. The focus is on…When Nero took the stage, the audience played along – or else. The drama thus enacted, whether in the theatre proper or in the political arena, unfolds in all its complexity in "Actors in the Audience". This is a book about language, theatricality and empire – about how the Roman emperor dramatized his rule and how his subordinates in turn staged their response. The focus is on Nero: his performances onstage spurred his contemporaries to reflect on the nature of power and representation, and to make the stage a paradigm for larger questions about the theatricality of power. Through these portrayals by ancient writers, Shadi Bartsch explores what happens to language and representation when all discourse is distorted by the pull of an autocratic authority. Some Roman senators, forced to become actors and dissimulators under the scrutinizing eye of the ruler, portrayed themselves and their class as the victims of regimes that are, to the modern eye, redolent of Stalinism. Other writers claimed that doublespeak – saying one thing and meaning two – was the way one could, and did, undo the constraining effects of imperial oppression. Tacitus, Suetonius, and Juvenal all figure in Bartsch’s shrewd analysis of historical and literary responses to the brute facts of empire; even the "Panegyricus" of Pliny the Younger now appears as a reaction against the widespread awareness of dissimulation. Informed by theories of dramaturgy, sociology, new historicism and cultural criticism, this close reading of literary and historical texts gives us a new perspective on the politics of the Roman Empire, and on the languages and representation of power.

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Afterlives of Endor Witchcraft, Theatricality, and Uncertainty from the Malleus Maleficarum to Shakespeare


Free Download Laura Levine, "Afterlives of Endor: Witchcraft, Theatricality, and Uncertainty from the "Malleus Maleficarum" to Shakespeare"
English | ISBN: 150177218X | 2023 | 192 pages | PDF | 797 KB
Afterlives of Endor offers an analysis of the way early modern English literature addressed the period’s anxieties about witchcraft and theatricality. What determined whether or not a demonologist imagined a trial as a spectacle? What underlying epistemological constraints governed such choices and what conceptions of witchcraft did these choices reveal? Pairing readings of demonological texts with canonical plays and poetry, Laura Levine examines such questions. Through analyses of manuals and pamphlets about the prosecution of witches―including Reginald Scot’s skeptical The Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584), King James VI/I’s Daemonologie (1597), and Jean Bodin’s De la Demonomanie des Sorciers (1580)―Afterlives of Endor examines the way literary texts such as Shakespeare’s The Winter’s Tale and The Tempest, Spenser’s

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Theatricality as Medium


Free Download Samuel Weber, "Theatricality as Medium"
English | 2004 | pages: 414 | ISBN: 0823224163, 0823224155 | EPUB | 2,1 mb
Ever since Aristotle’s Poetics, both the theory and the practice of theater have been governed by the assumption that it is a form of representation dominated by what Aristotle calls the "mythos," or the "Description." This conception of theater has subordinated characteristics related to the theatrical medium, such as the process and place of staging, to the demands of a unified narrative.

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