Political Dramaturgies and Theatre Spectatorship: Provocations for Change (Methuen Drama Engage)

Political Dramaturgies and Theatre Spectatorship: Provocations for Change (Methuen Drama Engage)

by EnochBrater (Series Editor), Mark Taylor - Batty (Series Editor), Liz Tomlin (Author)

Synopsis

Has political theatre lost its potency and ability to effect change? Are audiences less inclined to be moved and less able to imagine alternative political realities in our individualized age? What strategies should theatre makers employ to respond to our present climate in ways that are both affective and effective? In this important study Liz Tomlin argues that the capacities of the contemporary and future spectator to be `effected' or `affected' by politically-motivated theatre needs to be urgently re-evaluated in light of the current political and philosophical climate. Drawing on a wide range of philosophical, psychological and sociological research Tomlin proposes that politically-motivated practice needs to take into account the spectator's decreasing capacity for empathy and ability to imagine the future, and an understanding of how individualism has replaced collectivism as the seemingly rational human response to danger to the self. She offers a re-evaluation of politically-motivated models of contemporary theatre such as Brechtian ideology critique, radical tragedy, documentary, verbatim and relational theatre practices in order to rigorously interrogate if and how theatre can best contribute to the emerging resistance to global neoliberal capitalism. Work analyzed ranges from dramatic texts including George Brant's Grounded, David Greig's The Events and Caryl Churchill's Advice to Iraqi Women and Far Away to contemporary performance by Stan's Cafe, Ontroerend Goed, Coney and Kaleider; to new performance writing by Chris Thorpe and Andy Smith.

$147.35

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20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 216
Publisher: Methuen Drama
Published: 13 Jun 2019

ISBN 10: 1474295606
ISBN 13: 9781474295604
Book Overview: Liz Tomlin re-evaluates the political efficacy of a wide range of contemporary theatre practice in light of claims that the human subject is becoming increasingly individualized and precarious, with damaging consequences for the spectator's capacity to empathize and envisage possible futures.

Author Bio
Liz Tomlin is a Senior Lecturer in Drama and Theatre Arts at the University of Birmingham, UK. She is the author of Acts and Apparitions: Discourses on the Real in Performance Practice and Theory 1990 - 2010 (2013), and the editor of British Theatre Companies 1995-2014 (Methuen Drama, 2015) and Point Blank (2007). She is also an experienced playwright and director, producing her best-known work for Point Blank Theatre between 1999 and 2006.