Writing Performance: Poeticizing the Researcher's Body

Etukansi
SIU Press, 1999 - 168 sivua
Ronald J. Pelias is concerned with writing about performance, from the everyday performative routines to the texts on stage. He seeks to write performatively, to offer poetic or aesthetic renderings of performance events in order to capture some sense of their nature. In his quest for the spirit of theatrical performances in a collection of essays, Pelias, of course, asks more of the written word than the word can deliver. Yet the attempt is both desirable -- and necessary. To discuss performance without some accounting for its essence as art, he asserts, is at best misleading, at worst, fraud.

Pelias divides his efforts to present performance events into three general categories: "Performing Every Day", "On Writing and Performing", and "Being a Witness". As the title implies, "Performing Every Day" focuses on performances ranging from the daily business of enacting roles to the telling of tales that make life meaningful. It incorporates essays about the ongoing process of presenting oneself in everyday life; the gender script that insists that men enact manly performances; the classroom performances of teachers and students; stories of gender, class, and race that mark identity; and a performance installation entitled "A Day's Talk", which is a record of talk produced in a day's time accompanied by reflections about and responses to that talk.

"On Writing and Performing" examines the written script and performance practices. It contains a description of a struggle between a writer and a performer as they protect their own interests; an intimate look at an apprehensive performer; a short play entitled "The Audition", which deals with what it means to be an actor; a chronicle ofperformance process from the perspective of an actor; and a brief essay on the nature of performance.

"Being a Witness" examines performance from the perspective of the audience and the director. It includes essays on the experience of being an audience member; viewing theatre in the context of New York City; directing and being directed by actors' bodies; watching The DEF Comedy Jam; and, in the form of an interview, some final reflections about working with performance for many years.

 

Sisältö

An Ethnographic Autobiography of Performance in Everyday Life
3
The Business of Performing Manly
11
Performing in the Classroom
21
Telling Tales
33
A Days Talk
46
Part Two On Writing and Performing
71
The Poet and Performer Take Stage
73
Confessions of an Apprehensive Performer
79
A Love Song for J Alfred Prufrock
97
Performance Is
109
Part Three Being a Witness
113
On Looking On
115
Doing the New York Scene
127
The DEF Comedy Jam bell hooks and Me
135
Moving Bodies in Space and Time
147
An Interview
160

The Audition
88

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Tietoja kirjailijasta (1999)

Ronald J. Pelias is a professor of speech communication at Southern Illinois University at Carbondale. He is the author of Performance Studies: The Interpretation of Aesthetic Texts.

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