Performance and...
Performance and...
In titling our chapter 'Performance and...' our intention is not to privilege performance studies over theatre studies or drama but rather to call to attention the longstanding proposition that performance (studies) 'resists or rejects definition' (Schechner, Richard, 1998, 'What Is 'Performance Studies' Anyway?' in: P. Phelan and J. Lane (eds.), The Ends of Performance, NYU Press, p. 360) and as such highlight the potential it holds for interdisciplinary scholarship and the way in which the idea of performance has been conceived fluidly and expansively, both key concerns of all the volumes reviewed here. We are, we hope, at a point in the development of performance and theatre studies where there is an understanding, acceptance and exploration of the mutually constructive and beneficial interweaving of these two 'traditions' of scholarship within the broader field of drama. In the books we look at, both 'theatre' and 'performance' are brought to bear on the matters at hand almost interchangeably, with established text-based dramas taking their place alongside works in the performance art tradition to further arguments pertaining to a variety of disciplines. Such plurality of approach is a defining feature of the works we have chosen to discuss and binds them to a common purpose: the exploration of drama/theatre/performance in, with and between other disciplines and discourses in the pursuit of illuminating the world around us in more meaningful ways.
269-293
Spence, Jocelyn
5f3fb0b7-b821-4253-bdc8-60a8a0691d23
Duggan, Patrick
d6708da8-fc8f-490c-9005-fd8302295999
23 June 2016
Spence, Jocelyn
5f3fb0b7-b821-4253-bdc8-60a8a0691d23
Duggan, Patrick
d6708da8-fc8f-490c-9005-fd8302295999
Spence, Jocelyn and Duggan, Patrick
(2016)
Performance and...
The Year's Work in Critical and Cultural Theory, 24 (1), .
(doi:10.1093/ywcct/mbw013).
Abstract
In titling our chapter 'Performance and...' our intention is not to privilege performance studies over theatre studies or drama but rather to call to attention the longstanding proposition that performance (studies) 'resists or rejects definition' (Schechner, Richard, 1998, 'What Is 'Performance Studies' Anyway?' in: P. Phelan and J. Lane (eds.), The Ends of Performance, NYU Press, p. 360) and as such highlight the potential it holds for interdisciplinary scholarship and the way in which the idea of performance has been conceived fluidly and expansively, both key concerns of all the volumes reviewed here. We are, we hope, at a point in the development of performance and theatre studies where there is an understanding, acceptance and exploration of the mutually constructive and beneficial interweaving of these two 'traditions' of scholarship within the broader field of drama. In the books we look at, both 'theatre' and 'performance' are brought to bear on the matters at hand almost interchangeably, with established text-based dramas taking their place alongside works in the performance art tradition to further arguments pertaining to a variety of disciplines. Such plurality of approach is a defining feature of the works we have chosen to discuss and binds them to a common purpose: the exploration of drama/theatre/performance in, with and between other disciplines and discourses in the pursuit of illuminating the world around us in more meaningful ways.
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Published date: 23 June 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 502934
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502934
PURE UUID: bc28f01e-e419-4699-abae-8dbb94ba5cc7
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Date deposited: 14 Jul 2025 16:38
Last modified: 15 Jul 2025 02:18
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Author:
Jocelyn Spence
Author:
Patrick Duggan
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