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El. knyga: Performance: A Critical Introduction

3.65/5 (97 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: 306 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351983822
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 306 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 25-Oct-2017
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781351983822
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Since its original publication in 1996, Marvin Carlson's Performance: A Critical Introduction has remained the definitive guide to understanding performance as a theatrical activity. It is an unparalleled exploration of the myriad ways in which performance has been interpreted, its importance to disciplines from anthropology to linguistics, and how it underpins essential concepts of human society.

In this comprehensively revised and updated third edition, Carlson tackles the pressing themes and theories of our age, with expanded coverage of :











the growth and importance of racial and ethnic performance;





the emergence of performance concerned with age and disability;





the popularity and significance of participatory and immersive theatre;





the crucial relevance of identity politics and cultural performance in the twenty-first century.

Also including a fully updated bibliography and glossary, this classic text is an invaluable touchstone for any student of performance studies, theatre history, and the performing and visual arts.

Recenzijos

Praise for the previous edition:

"This is vintage Carlsonerudite, concise, precise and engaging"

Maria Shevstova, Theatre Quarterly

List of figures
xi
Acknowledgments xiii
Introduction: what is performance? 1(8)
The aims of this book
2(1)
The display of skills
2(1)
Patterned behavior
3(1)
Keeping up the standard
4(1)
Theatre and performance art
5(1)
The plan of this book
6(3)
1 The performance of culture: anthropological and ethnographic approaches
9(23)
Performance and anthropology
10(1)
Cultural performance
11(1)
Kenneth Burke and the rhetoric of performance
12(2)
Victor Turner and social drama
14(1)
Richard Schechner and social drama
15(2)
Liminal and liminoid
17(2)
Performance and play
19(2)
Subversive play
21(2)
Performing anthropology
23(9)
2 Performance in society: sociological and psychological approaches
32(30)
Nikolas Evreinoff and social roles
33(1)
Kenneth Burke and dramatism
34(1)
Erving Goffman and role playing
35(1)
Framing
36(1)
Umberto Eco and ostentation
37(1)
Performance and agency
38(2)
Social performance---negative views
40(1)
Bruce Wilshire and ethical responsibility
41(1)
Social performance---positive views
42(1)
Moreno and psychodrama
43(1)
Behavior therapy
44(1)
Eric Berne and Talcott Parsons
44(1)
Social constructionism
45(2)
Goffman and keying
47(1)
Schecbner and restored behavior
48(2)
Binocular vision and the actual
50(2)
Performance and psychoanalysis
52(1)
Identification and psychosemiotics
52(1)
Elin Diamond and psychoanalytic theory
53(1)
Ann Pellegrini and racial identity
54(1)
Pathologies of identification---hysteria
54(1)
Pathologies of identification---homosexuality
55(1)
Pathologies of identification---melancholia
56(1)
Judith Butler and melancholia
57(1)
Tomkins, Sedgwick and Muhoz
57(1)
Performance psychology
58(4)
3 The performance of language: linguistic approaches
62(29)
Semiotics
62(1)
The post-structuralist challenge
63(1)
Chomsky's competence and performance
64(1)
Dell Hymes and functional linguistics
64(1)
Bahktin and the utterance
65(2)
Austin and speech act theory
67(1)
Searle and speech act theory
68(1)
Kristeva and speech act theory
69(1)
Benveniste and speech act theory
70(1)
Katz and speech act theory
70(1)
Shoshana Felman and the literary speech act
71(2)
Literature as act
73(1)
Stanley Fish
73(1)
Pratt and the tellable
74(1)
Kristeva and the problem of the "author"
74(1)
Intentions and effects in literary speech acts
75(1)
Drama as a literary speech act
76(1)
Speech acts within the drama
77(1)
Speech act theory and semiotics: Keir Elam
77(1)
Speech act theory and semiotics: Eli Rozik
78(1)
Text and performance
79(1)
Jacques Derrida and citation
80(2)
Bourdieu and social authority
82(1)
Judith Butler and performativity
82(3)
Butler, Spivak and precarity
85(1)
Performance and the social sciences: a look backward
86(5)
4 Performance in its historical context
91(28)
Performance's new orientation
91(1)
Popular forms
91(1)
The avant-garde tradition
92(2)
Jean Alter and the performant function
94(1)
Folk and popular performance
95(2)
Fairs and circuses
97(1)
Solo performances
98(1)
American minstrelsy
99(2)
Vaudevilles and reviews
101(1)
The cabaret
102(1)
Russian experimental performance
102(1)
Isadora Duncan
103(1)
Pageants and spectacles
104(1)
Futurism
104(1)
Dada and surrealism
105(2)
TheBauhaus
107(1)
The tradition of mime
108(2)
St Denis and the tradition of dance
110(1)
John Cage, Merce Cunningham, Anna Halprin
110(2)
Happenings
112(2)
Kostelanetz and the Theater of Mixed Means
114(5)
5 Performance art
119(30)
The beginnings of performance art
119(1)
Conceptual art
120(1)
Body art
120(2)
Chris Burden, Vito Acconci, Marina Abramovic
122(1)
Performance art and theatre
123(1)
The Theatre of Mixed Means
124(1)
Early British performance art
124(1)
Jerome Savary
125(1)
Outdoor and site-specific performance
126(3)
Robert Wilson
129(1)
The new circus
130(2)
The new vaudevillians
132(1)
Persona performance and walkabouts
133(2)
Autobiographical performance
135(1)
Laurie Anderson
136(1)
The turn to language
137(1)
Word and image
138(1)
Politics and performance
139(2)
Non-dance
141(1)
Live art
142(1)
Live art and the media
142(1)
Performance and new technology
143(1)
Back to the gallery
144(5)
6 Performance and the postmodern
149(26)
Ihab Hassan
149(1)
Thomas Leabheart
150(1)
Greenberg, Fried, and modernism
151(2)
The heritage of Artaud
153(2)
Sally Banes and post-modern dance
155(1)
Reactions to Banes
156(2)
Charles Jencks and Linda Hutcheon
158(1)
Double-coding and parody
159(1)
Hal Foster and "neoconservative" postmodernism
160(2)
Postmodernism and poststructuralism
162(1)
Josette Feral: performance and theatricality
163(2)
Performance as experience
165(1)
The role of the audience
166(1)
Postmodern performance and politics
167(2)
Postmodernism and the postdramatic
169(1)
After postmodernism
170(5)
7 Performance and identity
175(34)
Feminist performance
175(1)
Liberal and cultural feminism
176(1)
Materialist feminism
176(1)
Women's performance in the 1960s
177(1)
The pioneers of women's performance
178(1)
Mythic explorations
179(1)
Autobiographical performance
180(1)
Autobiographical performance and formalist theory
181(1)
Lesbian performance
182(1)
Persona performance
183(1)
Gay performance
184(2)
Camp performance
186(1)
Cross-dressing and drag
186(2)
The NEA Four
188(2)
Later works of the NEA Four
190(1)
Performance and ethnicity
191(1)
Blackface performance
192(1)
Other ethnic identity performance
193(2)
Performance in the 1990s, new voices, new bodies
195(1)
Characters from the streets
196(2)
Def poetry performance
198(1)
Body art in the 1990s
199(1)
Victim art
200(1)
Disabled performance
201(2)
The performing audience
203(6)
8 Cultural performance
209(46)
Guerrilla and street performance
209(1)
Feminist guerrilla theatre and the Guerrilla Girls
210(2)
ASCO
212(1)
Social concerns in early feminist performance
212(1)
German and English perspectives
213(1)
The search for subjectivity
214(1)
The female performer, subjectivity, and the gaze
215(1)
Gendered and raced bodies in performance
216(2)
Visibility and representation
218(1)
Butler and citation
219(1)
Masquerade and mimicry
220(2)
Mimicry, cultural stereotypes, and the post-colonial
222(1)
Spiderwoman: mimicry and counter-mimicry
223(1)
Countermimicry and cultural representation
223(2)
Coco Fusco
225(1)
Gomez-Vena's border crossings
226(1)
The Yes Men: corporate countermimicry
226(1)
The problem of re-inscription
227(1)
Strategic essentialism and the politics of representation
228(1)
Latinx
229(1)
Performance and the community
230(2)
Political performance at the end of the century
232(1)
Ecological performance
233(3)
Intercultural performance in a global context
236(6)
Conclusion: what is performance?
242(1)
Performance and the blurring of boundaries
242(2)
Drawing conclusions
244(1)
Conquergood's 1991 survey of the field
245(2)
Performance studies international
247(1)
Overviews of the field
248(2)
Coda: an apologia for theatre
250(5)
Glossary 255(9)
Bibliography 264(17)
Name index 281(7)
Subject index 288
Marvin Carlson is Sidney E. Cohn Professor of Theatre, Comparative Literature and Middle Eastern Studies at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York, USA. Among his books are Theories of the Theatre and The Haunted Stage.