Book Description
This 1999 book discusses the ways performance is central to the practice and ideology of Athenian democracy.
Author : Simon Goldhill
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 434 pages
File Size : 22,16 MB
Release : 1999-06-13
Category : History
ISBN : 9780521642477
This 1999 book discusses the ways performance is central to the practice and ideology of Athenian democracy.
Author : David Wiles
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 251 pages
File Size : 15,82 MB
Release : 2024-04-30
Category : Drama
ISBN : 1009197584
Democracy, argues David Wiles, is actually a form of theatre. In making his case, the author deftly investigates orators at the foundational moments of ancient and modern democracy, demonstrating how their performative skills were used to try to create a better world. People often complain about demagogues, or wish that politicians might be more sincere. But to do good, politicians (paradoxically) must be hypocrites - or actors. Moving from Athens to Indian independence via three great revolutions – in Puritan England, republican France and liberal America – the book opens up larger questions about the nature of democracy. When in the classical past Plato condemned rhetoric, the only alternative he could offer was authoritarianism. Wiles' bold historical study has profound implications for our present: calls for personal authenticity, he suggests, are not an effective way to counter the rise of populism.
Author : Ariel Nereson
Publisher : University of Michigan Press
Page : 291 pages
File Size : 49,45 MB
Release : 2022-01-20
Category : History
ISBN : 0472055127
Explores the potential of movement to create and revise historical narratives of race and nation
Author : Loren J. Samons II
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 25 pages
File Size : 23,46 MB
Release : 2007-01-15
Category : History
ISBN : 1139826697
Mid-fifth-century Athens saw the development of the Athenian empire, the radicalization of Athenian democracy through the empowerment of poorer citizens, the adornment of the city through a massive and expensive building program, the classical age of Athenian tragedy, the assembly of intellectuals offering novel approaches to philosophical and scientific issues, and the end of the Spartan-Athenian alliance against Persia and the beginning of open hostilities between the two greatest powers of ancient Greece. The Athenian statesman Pericles both fostered and supported many of these developments. Although it is no longer fashionable to view Periclean Athens as a social or cultural paradigm, study of the history, society, art, and literature of mid-fifth-century Athens remains central to any understanding of Greek history. This collection of essays reveal the political, religious, economic, social, artistic, literary, intellectual, and military infrastructure that made the Age of Pericles possible.
Author : David Wiles
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 260 pages
File Size : 50,67 MB
Release : 2000-05-25
Category : Drama
ISBN : 9780521648578
Specially written for students and enthusiasts, David Wiles introduces ancient Greek theatre and cultural life.
Author : Sally Banes
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 28,15 MB
Release : 1993
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 9780822313991
Judson Dance Theater involved such collaborators as Merce Cunningham, Yvonne Rainer, Steve Paxton, Carolee Schneemann, Trisha Brown, Robert Rauschenberg, David Tudor, et al.
Author : Tony Fisher
Publisher : Palgrave Macmillan
Page : 351 pages
File Size : 31,44 MB
Release : 2018-07-12
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 9781349957279
This book combines performance analysis with contemporary political philosophy to advance new ways of understanding both political performance and the performativity of the politics of the street. Our times are pre-eminently political times and have drawn radical responses from many theatre and performance practitioners. However, a decade of conflict in the Middle East and Afghanistan, the eruption of new social movements around the world, the growth of anti-capitalist and anti-globalisation struggles, the upsurge of protests against the blockades of neoliberalism, and the rising tide of dissent and anger against corporate power, with its exorbitant social costs, have left theatre and performance scholarship confronting something of a dilemma: how to theorize the political antagonisms of our day? Drawing on the resources of ‘post-Marxist’ political thinkers such as Chantal Mouffe and Jacques Rancière, the book explores how new theoretical horizons have been made available for performance analysis.
Author : Jacob Gallagher-Ross
Publisher : Northwestern University Press
Page : 397 pages
File Size : 21,17 MB
Release : 2018-04-15
Category : Performing Arts
ISBN : 0810136686
Theaters of the Everyday: Aesthetic Democracy on the American Stage reveals a vital but little-recognized current in American theatrical history: the dramatic representation of the quotidian and mundane. Jacob Gallagher-Ross shows how twentieth-century American theater became a space for negotiating the demands of innovative form and democratic availability. Offering both fresh reappraisals of canonical figures and movements and new examinations of theatrical innovators, Theaters of the Everyday reveals surprising affinities between artists often considered poles apart, such as John Cage and Lee Strasberg, and Thornton Wilder and the New York experimentalist Nature Theater of Oklahoma. Gallagher-Ross persuasively shows how these creators eschew conventional definitions of dramatic action and focus attention on smaller but no less profound dramas of perception, consciousness, and day-to-day life. Gallagher-Ross traces some of the intellectual roots of the theater of the everyday to American transcendentalism, with its pragmatic process philosophy as well as its sense of ordinary experience as the wellspring of aesthetic awareness.
Author : Marianne McDonald
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : pages
File Size : 41,2 MB
Release : 2007-05-31
Category : Drama
ISBN : 1139827251
This series of essays by prominent academics and practitioners investigates in detail the history of performance in the classical Greek and Roman world. Beginning with the earliest examples of 'dramatic' presentation in the epic cycles and reaching through to the latter days of the Roman Empire and beyond, this 2007 Companion covers many aspects of these broad presentational societies. Dramatic performances that are text-based form only one part of cultures where presentation is a major element of all social and political life. Individual chapters range across a two thousand year timescale, and include specific chapters on acting traditions, masks, properties, playing places, festivals, religion and drama, comedy and society, and commodity, concluding with the dramatic legacy of myth and the modern media. The book addresses the needs of students of drama and classics, as well as anyone with an interest in the theatre's history and practice.
Author : Dragan Klaić
Publisher :
Page : 190 pages
File Size : 17,86 MB
Release : 2012
Category : Theater
ISBN : 9781461928423
Commercial theatre is thriving across Europe, while public theatre has suffered under changing patterns of cultural consumption - as well as sharp reductions in government subsidies for the arts. At a time when the rationale behind these subsidies is being widely reexamined, it has never been more important for public theatre to demonstrate its continued merit. In Resetting the Stage, Dragan Klaic argues convincingly that, in an increasingly crowded market of cultural goods, public theatre is best served not by imitating its much larger commercial counterpart, but by asserting its artistic dis.