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Afterlife of the Theatre of the Absurd: The Avant-garde, Spectatorship, and Psychoanalysis New edition [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 292 g
  • Sērija : Dramaturgies 37
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-May-2018
  • Izdevniecība: PIE - Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 280760191X
  • ISBN-13: 9782807601918
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 53,94 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 222 pages, height x width: 210x148 mm, weight: 292 g
  • Sērija : Dramaturgies 37
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-May-2018
  • Izdevniecība: PIE - Peter Lang
  • ISBN-10: 280760191X
  • ISBN-13: 9782807601918
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:

In 1961, Martin Esslin named a body of plays that lacked plot, character depth, and details of time and space the "Theatre of the Absurd". Esslin explained that this type of theatre, minimalist in the extreme, constituted a response to the existential crisis of Europe, which was in the midst of recovering from World War II. But the fact that this body of theatre lacked details of time and space means that we may break the ties that anchor the Theatre of the Absurd irremediably to the historical context of post-World War II Europe.

How can the Theatre of the Absurd speak meaningfully to us in the twenty-first century? This book explores this question by combining the avant-garde that Martin Esslin named in 1961 in his signature work The Theatre of the Absurd with gender studies, queer theory, and psychoanalysis, and avant-garde studies. The Theatre of the Absurd is capable of subverting post-millennial institutions and ideologies, including the Prison Industrial Complex and the West’s domination of the Islamic world in a post-9/11 era.



This book challenges Martin Esslin’s signature tome The Theatre of The Absurd which categorized Absurdist plays reductively as displaying an existentialist crisis of "Man" and provocatively proposes that avant-garde theater of the past is capable of making subversive interventions in the now.

Introduction 11(34)
Avant-Garde Exhaustion: An Exhausted Theory
16(7)
The Theatre of the Absurd
23(7)
Methodological Toolkit
30(10)
Chapter Outlines
40(5)
Comedy in Unexpected Places: Ionesco's The Bald Soprano (1950)
45(30)
When the "Tragedy of Language" became Comedy
49(5)
Parodies of Femininity
54(7)
Re-appropriations of Masculinity
61(3)
Parodies of Gender Norms and Post-Gender Alternatives
64(11)
Remembrance Through Rejection: Active Nihilism, Vietnam, and Adamov's Off Limits (1969)
75(22)
Audience Anger and Psychosis
80(11)
Foreclosure and Alternative Memories
91(6)
Psychotic recuperations of a multi-racial feminism in Beckett's Not I (1972)
97(26)
Psychosis and Gender Exceptionalism in Not I
99(7)
Billie Whitelaw at the Royal Court (1973)
106(4)
Jessica Tandy at the Lincoln Center (1972)
110(4)
Lisa Dwan on Tour (2005, 2009, 2014)
114(9)
Genet's The Blacks: Remixed at the Intersection of Gender and Race
123(26)
Unlearning Gendered Racism
126(11)
Making Sense of the Incomprehensible
137(12)
Queering the Carceral and Assaulting America's Prison Industrial Complex: Arrabal's And They Put Handcuffs on the Flowers (1969)
149(28)
Destruction of the Myth of the Prison as Protector
153(10)
Alternative Queerness
163(14)
Conclusion 177(8)
Past, Present, Future Absurdist Avant-gardes 185(12)
Works Cited 197(12)
Index 209