Postcard from the edge: Tom Holloway's beyond the neck and the limits of verbatim

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Resource Text: Journal
Title Postcard from the edge: Tom Holloway's beyond the neck and the limits of verbatim
Creator Contributors
Abstract/Description When the New South Wales Board of Studies put Tom Holloway's Beyond the Neck (2007) on the list of prescribed texts for the Year 12 Verbatim Theatre elective, they seemed to be wilfully ignoring the playwright's statement that the play is not verbatim. On the one hand, the lack of vernacular speech and characters that correspond to real-life people would seem to confirm Holloway's argument. Conversely, the play's reliance on interviews, community consultation, bottom-up history and mode of diegetic theatricality would seem to support the Board of Studies' decision. This article argues that this difference of opinion is due, in part, to a difference of definition: whereas Holloway conceives of verbatim as a genre, the Board of Studies sees it as a practice. To contemplate verbatim as a practice opens the way for new research across theatre, performance, dance, television and film.
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Source Australasian Drama Studies, ADSA, VIC
Issue 72
Page 100-125
Date Issued April 2019
Language English
ISSN 0810-4123
Citation Caroline Wake, Postcard from the edge: Tom Holloway's beyond the neck and the limits of verbatim, Australasian Drama Studies, 72, April 2019, 100-125
Data Set AusStage
Resource Identifier 68779