UID:
edocfu_9959063784502883
Umfang:
1 online resource
ISBN:
9781487514099
Inhalt:
The early years of the twenty-first century have witnessed a proliferation of non-fiction, reality-based performance genres, including documentary and verbatim theatre, site-specific theatre, autobiographical theatre, and immersive theatre. Insecurity: Perils and Products of Theatres of the Real begins with the premise that although the inclusion of real objects and real words on the stage would ostensibly seem to increase the epistemological security and documentary truth-value of the presentation, in fact the opposite is the case. Contemporary audiences are caught between a desire for authenticity and immediacy of connection to a person, place, or experience, and the conditions of our postmodern world that render our lives insecure. The same conditions that underpin our yearning for authenticity thwart access to an impossible real. As a result of the instability of social reality, the audience, Jenn Stephenson explains, is unable to trust the mechanisms of theatricality. The by-product of theatres of the real in the age of post-reality is insecurity.
Anmerkung:
Frontmatter --
,
Contents --
,
Acknowledgments --
,
1. Introduction --
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2. Real People Part 1: Winning and/or Losing the Game of Life in Autobiographical Performance – Winners and Losers --
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3. Real People Part 2: Insecurity and Ethical Failure in the Encounter with Strangers – 100% Vancouver, RARE, and Polyglotte --
,
4. Real Words: Reproducing Life in Remediated Verbatim Theatre – Seeds and 300 TAPES --
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5. Real Space: The Insecure Geographies of Site-Specific Audio Walks – Garden/ /Suburbia and Landline --
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6. Real Bodies Part 1: The Traumatic Real in Immersive Performances of Political Crisis and Insecurity – Counting Sheep and Foreign Radical --
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7. Real Bodies Part 2: Narcissistic Spectatorship in Theatrical “Haunted Houses” of Solo Immersive Performance – Everyman --
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8. Coda: Theatres of the Real in the Age of Post-Reality --
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Notes --
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Bibliography --
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Index
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In English.
Sprache:
Englisch
DOI:
10.3138/9781487514099
URL:
https://doi.org/10.3138/9781487514099