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Theatricality as Medium

Fordham Univ Press (2004)

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  1. The Rhyme That Remains: Populist Poetics.Virgil W. Brower - 2012 - Everyday Genius 6 (21):61-81.
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  • (1 other version)Símbolo y alegoría o redención y melancolía: Estética del barroco según Walter Benjamin.Marc Berdet - 2018 - Revista de filosofía (Chile) 74:21-40.
    Resumen Siguiendo su idea de la tarea del crítico, Walter Benjamin hace surgir imágenes de felicidad de Calderón en el paisaje “originario” en ruinas de Gryphius: la estrella fugaz del barroco español brilla, intermitente, en las tinieblas demoníacas del barroco silesio. El barroco no encuentra así su verdad sino en la inversión dialéctica de su melancolía alegórica en el momento simbólico de la redención. Intento demostrar cómo se manifiesta, en Origen del drama barroco alemán, una dialéctica figurativa suspendida entre símbolo (...)
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  • Can the subaltern smile|[quest]| Oedipus without Oedipus.Andrés Fabián Henao Castro - 2015 - Contemporary Political Theory 14 (4):315.
    This article explores the relationship between theory and praxis by contrasting three different models of intellectual endeavor: totalizing, particular and decolonial. Attending to the critique that Gayatri Spivak raised against Michel Foucault and Gilles Deleuze in Can the Subaltern Speak?, this article advocates a dramaturgical reading of texts as a model for political theory to address subaltern agency. It reads such agency in the smile that Pier Paolo Pasolini registers in his 1967 film version of Sophocles’ play, Oedipus Tyrannos. Dramaturgically (...)
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  • The theatricality of sport and the issue of ideology.Jean-François Morissette - 2014 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 41 (3):381-397.
    Through the study of Richard Gruneau and Gunter Gebauer’s respective works, this article examines the social significance and theoretical implications of sport’s capacity to represent social life in a theatrical manner. The drama-like images and representations sporting practices produce, institutions codify, and television programs enhance is considered in relation to ideology’s integrative, legitimating, and distorting functions . Acknowledging the filiations of ‘theatre’ with ‘theory’ – both words stand for ‘to contemplate, to see, to observe’ – this study considers theatricality as (...)
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  • Mimesis in Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan.Laura S. Reagan - 2012 - History of the Human Sciences 25 (4):25-42.
    How can citizens construct the political authority under which they will live? I argue that Thomas Hobbes’s Leviathan (1651) answers this question concerning the constitutive power of political and normative agency by employing four dimensions of mimesis from the Greek and Roman traditions. And I argue that mimesis accounts for the know-how, or power/knowledge, the general ‘man’ draws upon in constructing the commonwealth. Hobbes revalues poetic mimesis through his stylistic decisions, including the invitation to the reader to read ‘himself’ in (...)
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  • Express yourself: the value of theatricality in soccer.Kenneth Aggerholm - 2013 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 40 (2):205 - 224.
    The purpose of this paper is to study the expressive part of game performance in soccer by introducing the concept of theatricality to describe a special form of expression. The aim is to contribute to the understanding of game performance by looking into the appearance, role and value of theatricality. The main argument of the paper is that theatricality can describe an important, but rarely noticed performance aspect, as it provides a unifying concept for expressive distancing in four dimensions of (...)
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  • Repeating, Not Simply Recollecting, Repetition: On Kierkegaard’s Ethical Exercises.T. Wilson Dickinson - 2011 - Sophia 50 (4):657-675.
    This essay argues for a formative, and not simply abstract, aspect to the philosophy of religion by attending to the practices of writing employed in Søren Kierkegaard’s pseudonymous work Repetition . By locating this text within an ethical tradition that focuses upon the practices that form subjects, rather than simply the formulation of a theory, its seemingly literary performances can be viewed as exercises. In particular, this text deploys and transforms the Stoic practices of self writing, in the form of (...)
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  • Theatre and the materialities of communication.Michael Darroch - unknown
    This dissertation is situated within the field of media studies, with a particular focus on the "materialities of communication." The concept of "materialities" is oriented to the underlying conditions that allow communication to take place: the places, carriers and modes of communication that serve to shape and even alter meaning. My dissertation asks how this "material turn" can usefully be applied to and help develop the study of theatre.
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