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El. knyga: Robert Lepage / Ex Machina: Revolutions in Theatrical Space

(Formerly Kingston University London, UK), Series edited by (University of Leeds, UK), Series edited by (University of Michigan, USA)
  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Serija: Methuen Drama Engage
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-13: 9781474276597
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 256 pages
  • Serija: Methuen Drama Engage
  • Išleidimo metai: 07-Feb-2019
  • Leidėjas: Methuen Drama
  • ISBN-13: 9781474276597
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James Reynolds offers an in-depth exploration and critical repositioning of Robert Lepage’s theatrical work with his company Ex Machina, accomplished through detailed interrogations of company practices, key practitioners and performance events (1994-2016).

Robert Lepage and Ex Machina’s theatricality is inter-disciplinary and inter-cultural, and, inevitably, characterised by intense hybridity. These complex features – while the source of an internationally celebrated theatrical innovation, and considerable pleasure for audiences – have nevertheless also prompted notable criticism. Robert Lepage / Ex Machina: Revolutions in Theatrical Space reads against the grain of criticism, providing readers with a fresh, practice-based and critical perspective by arguing that these innovative aesthetic practices operate simultaneously as positive cultural principles. Drawing directly on case studies of process and a wide range of productions, and building from in-depth interviews, this book intertwines theoretical and practical concerns, weighing them in balance, and, in doing so, produces for the reader a new critical perspective on Robert Lepage and Ex Machina.

Through the course of his analysis, James Reynolds illustrates that underpinning the inter-disciplinary eclecticism of Ex Machina's practice is a profound engagement with social, cultural and political difference. Running through the work is a drive to create performances built around a principle of contradiction, through which audiences can apprehend difference in its myriad, infinite forms. Consequently, Robert Lepage / Ex Machina explores this embracing of difference in all its depth and complexity, opening a key way for readers to develop both their practical and theoretical appreciation of this practice. At the same time, the discourse around this vital, forward-looking practice is rebooted, not only by re-thinking its contribution to the vocabulary of drama and theatre, but also through revealing and assessing the critical discourse it initiates through performance.

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James Reynolds offers an in-depth exploration and critical repositioning of Robert Lepages theatrical work with his company Ex Machina, accomplished through detailed interrogations of company practices, key practitioners and performance events (1994-2016).
Acknowledgements x
Introduction: Genesis 1(20)
Ex Machina in brief
2(2)
Revolutions in theatrical space
4(2)
Architectural aesthetics
6(2)
The road to Ex Machina
8(3)
Learning curves
11(4)
Foundations: La Caserne and the patenteux
15(6)
Part One Foundations and stepping stones (1994-9)
Introduction
21(2)
1 Lepagean aesthetics
23(14)
Discovering Japan's geo-poetry: Seven Streams of the River Ota
24(2)
Turning the power of space into theatre
26(2)
Contradiction as aesthetic key
28(2)
Flagships
30(3)
Counterpoint: A Dream Play
33(4)
2 Making concrete narratives
37(16)
Ground work: The Geometry of Miracles
37(2)
Concrete poetry
39(2)
Making narrative concrete: Elsinore
41(2)
Scenographic acting and the body politic
43(2)
Concrete narratives: Sublime effects
45(3)
Critical condition
48(2)
Form as cultural expression
50(3)
3 Critical themes
53(20)
Evolution
54(1)
Turning point: The importance of Celestine
55(2)
Class, contradiction and the anti-hero
57(2)
The Damnation of Faust in Japan
59(3)
Process, collaboration, authorship and directing
62(5)
Cultural difference, cultural specificity
67(6)
Part Two Choosing all directions (2000-8)
Introduction
73(2)
4 Upgrades
75(22)
Zulu Time: Q for Quebec
76(4)
Upgrading the Trilogy
80(3)
The importance of Metissages
83(4)
Making The Far Side of the Moon
87(3)
Dramatic devices and the architecture of convergence
90(7)
5 Quebec stories
97(20)
Art and politics: La Casa Azul and The Buskers Opera
98(2)
Dance with three hands: Eonnagata
100(3)
Narrative terms: The story of the story of the storyteller
103(5)
KA: Entertainment architecture
108(3)
Writing the myth
111(1)
Reading the circus
112(5)
6 New ways
117(18)
The Image Mill: All roads lead to home
117(4)
Opera on tour: 1984 and The Rake's Progress
121(3)
Ex Machina at the Metropolitan Opera
124(2)
The Blue Dragon: Character, culture and concrete narrative
126(4)
Lipsynch: Staging the scream
130(2)
Process in process
132(3)
Part Three Starting points (2008-18)
Introduction
135(2)
7 Critical relationships
137(22)
The Nightingale and Other Short Fables
137(3)
Totem: Evolving through the gift shop
140(2)
Collaboration: Ex Machina and the Metropolitan Opera
142(5)
Wagner, architectural aesthetics and Der Ring des Nibelungen
147(1)
Reviewing the Ring
148(3)
The Tempest and LAmour de Loin
151(5)
Paying for art
156(3)
8 Brave new worlds
159(22)
Virtual reality: The Library at Night
159(2)
The Tempest: Collaborating the nation
161(1)
Hearts design
162(4)
Writing Hearts
166(3)
Concrete Hearts
169(6)
Writing
175(2)
Bet on red
177(4)
9 Beginning
181(18)
Frame by Frame
181(5)
Upgrades
186(1)
Making
187(7)
188 Taking the narrative turn
194(1)
LeDiamant
195(3)
Coda
198(1)
Notes 199(26)
Bibliography 225(8)
Index 233
James Reynolds is a Senior Lecturer in Drama at Kingston University, London, UK. His Ph.D. research at Queen Mary, University of London investigated performance practices in Robert Lepage's devised theatre. His publications include Howard Barkers Theatre: Wrestling with Catastrophe (Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, 2015) co-edited with Andy W. Smith, and Addiction and Performance (2014), co-edited with Zoe Zontou.