Generating Theatre Meaning : A Theory and Methodology of Performance Analysis
Generating Theatre Meaning : A Theory and Methodology of Performance Analysis
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Author(s): Rozik, Eli
ISBN No.: 9781845193300
Pages: 292
Year: 201008
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 43.24
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

Now in paperback, Generating Theatre Meaning offers a theory and methodology of performance analysis as an alternative to traditional play analysis. The underlying theme is that theatre performance is a descriptive text generated by the theatre medium, and that the process of generating meaning takes place in the actual encounter between a theatre performance and the spectator. Many new understandings result, including: how the theatre medium is iconic in the new sense of operating images of real or mental models; how this impacts on the verbal text and stage metaphor; how poetic principles structure fictional worlds and bestow unity and wholeness on performance-texts; how a dialogue between the implied director and the implied spectator is inscribed in the performance-text; and how the implied spectator is characterized by functions of framing, reading, interpreting, and experiencing a performance-text. It follows that actors' bodies on stage fulfill functions of textuality, metatheatricality, personification, characterization, and aesthetic effect. The introduction of the book surveys major contributions made to a methodology of performance analysis, particularly throughout the 20th century. Part I is devoted to the semiotic substratum of the performance text, i.e. to the theatre medium and its basic means of generating theatre texts and meaning.


The innovation of this approach lies in seeing theatre first and foremost as a nonverbal medium. Part II deals with the poetic structure of fictional worlds described by the theatre medium and the metaphoric and rhetoric structures that operate on the level of relationship between the description of such a world and the world of a spectator. Part III contains analyses of actual performance texts that illustrate the application of principles previously presented. This is the first comprehensive book to address the necessity of a methodology of performance analysis and to take issue with criticism of traditional theatre semiotics.


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