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FoucaultS Theatres [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x14 mm, weight: 376 g, 2 black & white illustrations
  • Sērija : Theatre: Theory Practice Performance
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Manchester University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1526135701
  • ISBN-13: 9781526135704
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  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 28,70 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 264 pages, height x width x depth: 234x156x14 mm, weight: 376 g, 2 black & white illustrations
  • Sērija : Theatre: Theory Practice Performance
  • Izdošanas datums: 28-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Manchester University Press
  • ISBN-10: 1526135701
  • ISBN-13: 9781526135704
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
The volume contributes to a new articulation of theatre and performance studies via Foucault's critical thought. With cutting edge studies by established and emerging writers in areas such as dramaturgy, film, music, cultural history and journalism, the volume aims to be accessible for both experienced researchers and advanced students encountering Foucault's work for the first time. The introduction sets out a thorough and informative assessment of Foucault's relevance to theatre and performance studies and to our present cultural moment - it rereads his profound engagement with questions of truth, power and politics, in light of previously unknown writings and lectures set in relation to current political and cultural concerns. Unique to this volume is the discovery of a 'theatrical' Foucault - the profound affinity of his thinking with questions of performativity. This discovery makes accessible the 'performance turn' to readers of Foucault, while opening up ways of reading Foucault's oeuvre 'theatrically'.

This book opens up innovative ways of reading philosophy ‘theatrically’, contributing to a new articulation of theatre and its relation to critical thought.

The volume contributes to a new articulation of theatre and performance studies via Foucault’s critical thought. With cutting edge studies by established and emerging writers in areas such as dramaturgy, film, music, cultural history and journalism, the volume aims to be accessible for both experienced researchers and advanced students encountering Foucault’s work for the first time. The introduction sets out a thorough and informative assessment of Foucault’s relevance to theatre and performance studies and to our present cultural moment – it rereads his profound engagement with questions of truth, power and politics, in light of previously unknown writings and lectures set in relation to current political and cultural concerns. Unique to this volume is the discovery of a ‘theatrical’ Foucault - the profound affinity of his thinking with questions of performativity. This discovery makes accessible the ‘performance turn’ to readers of Foucault, while opening up ways of reading Foucault’s oeuvre ‘theatrically’.

Recenzijas

This book comes at a time when Foucaults concerns with power, truth and knowledge could not be more pressing. So the focus here is on Foucault as a theatrical thinker. Taking the philosopher at his word, essays deploy the tropes and optics of theatre to examine Foucaults own methods and the practices of governance and workings of power he made it his lifes work to engage with. Demonstrating different ways of responding to the question that underpinned so much of Foucaults project: What are the practices that permit the daily work of desubjugation? the possibilities voiced here could not be more pertinent; a fortification against the perils of the day. Jane Rendell, Professor of Critical Spatial Practice, The Bartlett School of Architecture, UCL. -- .

List of figures
vii
List of contributors
viii
Acknowledgements i
Introduction: theatre, performance, Foucault 1(22)
Tony Fisher
Kelina Gotman
PART I TRUTH, METHODS, GENEALOGIES
23(76)
1 Foucaults philosophical theatres
25(13)
Mark D. Jordan
2 The dramas of knowledge: Foucault's genealogical theatre of truth
38(11)
Aline Wiarne
3 Foucault live! `A voice that still eludes the tomb of the text...'
49(4)
Magnolia Pauker
4 Foucault, Oedipus, Negritude
53(29)
Kelina Gotman
5 Foucault's critical dramaturgies
82(17)
Mark Robson
PART II DRAMATURGY
99(62)
6 Heterotopia and the mapping of unreal spaces on stage
101(15)
Joanne Tompkins
7 Foucault and Shakespeare: the theatre of madness
116(14)
Stuart Elden
8 Philosophical phantasms: `the Platonic differential' and `Zarathustra's laughter'
130(11)
Mischa Twitchin
9 Cage and Foucault: musical timekeeping and the security state
141(20)
Steve Potter
PART III GOVERNMENTALITY AND POWER
161(84)
10 Foucault and the Iranian Revolution: reassessed
163(12)
Tracey Nicholls
11 Sightlines: Foucault and Naturalist theatre
175(17)
Dan Rebellato
12 Theatre of poverty: popular illegalism on the nineteenth-century stage
192(29)
Tony Fisher
Foucault Speaks: Interview With Moriaki Watanabe
219(2)
13 The philosophical scene: Foucault interviewed by Moriaki Watanabe
221(18)
Michel Foucault
Robert Bononno
14 After words, afterwards: teaching Foucault
239(6)
Ann Pellegrini
Index 245
Tony Fisher is Reader in Theatre and Philosophy and Associate Director of Research at the Royal Central School for Speech and Drama, University of London

Kélina Gotman is Senior Reader in Theatre and Performance Studies at King's College London and Hölderlin Guest Professor in Comparative Dramaturgy at the Goethe Universität Frankfurt -- .