October 28, 2004
Online Magazine of the Visual Narrative
Image [&] Narrative
Issue 9. Performance--Guest edited by Karel Vanhaesebrouck--includes the following two articles:
Towards a theatrical narratology? Author: Karel Vanhaesebrouck Published: October 2004
Abstract (E): Traditionally narratology has always been associated with the study of texts and their constituting narrative elements. The analysis of theatre was then down-sized to the analysis of the theatre text. However, new developments in theatre and dance, in which the text is reduced to a mere peripheral element of the actual performance, ask for new analytic tools. How can a traditionally text-centred theory be transformed into a performance-oriented method for analysis, paying attention to the interpretive role of the spectator and taking into account the context the actual performance takes place in?
Performance and cognitive narratology Author: Jeroen Versteele Published: October 2004
Abstract (E): The last couple of years, (dance-)theatre companies that make use of ‘new media’ in their shows, have grown numerous and increasingly successful. This article focuses on some fragments in such productions that combine a theatrical setting with references to cinema language. It tries to distinguish three different relationships formal theatrical and filmic conventions can have with one another, and it relies on procedures in cognitive narratology to explain the effect such hybrids have on their audience.
Posted by jo at October 28, 2004 11:13 AM