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Robert Lepage / Ex Machina : revolutions in theatrical space / James Reynolds.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Methuen drama engagePublisher: London : Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, 2021Description: ix, 240 pages ; 22 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9781474276085
  • 1474276083
Subject(s): LOC classification:
  • PN2306.Q4 R496 2021
Contents:
Introduction. Genesis -- Part One. Foundations and stepping stones (1994-9). Lepagean aesthetics ; Making concrete narratives ; Critical themes -- Part Two. Choosing all directions (2000-8). Upgrades ; Québec stories ; New ways -- Part Three. Starting points. Critical relationships ; Brave new worlds ; Beginning.
Summary: Robert Lepage and Ex Machina's theatricality is inter-disciplinary and inter-cultural, and, inevitably, characterised by intense hybridity. These complex features – while the source of an internationally celebrated theatrical innovation, and considerable pleasure for audiences – have nevertheless also prompted notable criticism. Robert Lepage / Ex Machina: Revolutions in Theatrical Space reads against the grain of criticism, providing readers with a fresh, practice-based and critical perspective by arguing that these innovative aesthetic practices operate simultaneously as positive cultural principles. Drawing directly on case studies of process and a wide range of productions, and building from in-depth interviews, this book intertwines theoretical and practical concerns, weighing them in balance, and, in doing so, produces for the reader a new critical perspective on Robert Lepage and Ex Machina. Through the course of his analysis, James Reynolds illustrates that underpinning the inter-disciplinary eclecticism of Ex Machina's practice is a profound engagement with social, cultural and political difference. Running through the work is a drive to create performances built around a principle of contradiction, through which audiences can apprehend difference in its myriad, infinite forms. Consequently, Robert Lepage / Ex Machina explores this embracing of difference in all its depth and complexity, opening a key way for readers to develop both their practical and theoretical appreciation of this practice. At the same time, the discourse around this vital, forward-looking practice is rebooted, not only by re-thinking its contribution to the vocabulary of drama and theatre, but also through revealing and assessing the critical discourse it initiates through performance.
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Barcode
Books Books SPAA Library General Collection On Shelves PN2306.Q4 R496 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) In transit from SPAA Library to SPAA Library since 10/07/2024 0007796

Includes bibliographical references (pages 225-232) and index.

Introduction. Genesis -- Part One. Foundations and stepping stones (1994-9). Lepagean aesthetics ; Making concrete narratives ; Critical themes -- Part Two. Choosing all directions (2000-8). Upgrades ; Québec stories ; New ways -- Part Three. Starting points. Critical relationships ; Brave new worlds ; Beginning.

Robert Lepage and Ex Machina's theatricality is inter-disciplinary and inter-cultural, and, inevitably, characterised by intense hybridity. These complex features – while the source of an internationally celebrated theatrical innovation, and considerable pleasure for audiences – have nevertheless also prompted notable criticism. Robert Lepage / Ex Machina: Revolutions in Theatrical Space reads against the grain of criticism, providing readers with a fresh, practice-based and critical perspective by arguing that these innovative aesthetic practices operate simultaneously as positive cultural principles. Drawing directly on case studies of process and a wide range of productions, and building from in-depth interviews, this book intertwines theoretical and practical concerns, weighing them in balance, and, in doing so, produces for the reader a new critical perspective on Robert Lepage and Ex Machina. Through the course of his analysis, James Reynolds illustrates that underpinning the inter-disciplinary eclecticism of Ex Machina's practice is a profound engagement with social, cultural and political difference. Running through the work is a drive to create performances built around a principle of contradiction, through which audiences can apprehend difference in its myriad, infinite forms. Consequently, Robert Lepage / Ex Machina explores this embracing of difference in all its depth and complexity, opening a key way for readers to develop both their practical and theoretical appreciation of this practice. At the same time, the discourse around this vital, forward-looking practice is rebooted, not only by re-thinking its contribution to the vocabulary of drama and theatre, but also through revealing and assessing the critical discourse it initiates through performance.

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