To Watch Theatre: Essays on Genre and Corporeality

Export | Feedback | Print
Resource Text: Book
Title To Watch Theatre: Essays on Genre and Corporeality
Creator Contributors
Abstract/Description This book is about watching theatre; and how to utilise a corporeal semiotics to read genres of contemporary theatre. It suggests that three key concepts interact: genre, the formal term that structures theatricality, including the textual grammar of a dramatic work, its performance style, theatrical frame, and mode of rhetorical address; corporeality, an assemblage of the troubling physical work of the actors, the figurative forms in the text, and the ambivalent bodies of the spectators; and performance, the presenting of theatre as symbolic action in the social world. In order to develop new models of embodied spectatorship, these essays examine canonical productions of Medea, King Lear, Miss Julie, Genesi: The Museum of Sleep directed by Deborah Warner, Barrie Kosky, Anne Bogart, and Romeo Castellucci. With close attention to bodies and texts in performance, the book argues that to watch theatre is an intimate, yet political, atunement to processes of human transfiguration. It concludes by offering a reinvigorated perspective on tragedy and tragic experience in the theatre.
Related Works
Related Events
  • Genesi, The State Theatre, Melbourne, VIC, 24 October 2002
  • King Lear, Athenaeum Theatre, Melbourne, VIC, 2 September 1998
Related Contributors
Publisher Peter Lang
Date Issued 2009
Language English
Citation Rachel Fensham, To Watch Theatre: Essays on Genre and Corporeality, Peter Lang, 2009
Data Set AusStage
Resource Identifier 51513