Title
Doing dramaturgy : thinking through practice / Maaike Bleeker.
ISBN
9783031083037 electronic book
3031083032 electronic book
3031083024
9783031083020
Published
Cham, Switzerland : Palgrave Macmillan, [2023]
Language
English
Description
1 online resource : illustrations
Item Number
10.1007/978-3-031-08303-7 doi
Call Number
PN1661 .B54 2023
Dewey Decimal Classification
792.02
Summary
This book explores how doing dramaturgy is informed by todays highly diverse field of theatre, dance and performance. It does so in dialogue with fourteen performances and their makers, tracing the thinking-through-practice that underlies these creations. The first part of the book looks at how dramaturgs participate in practices of thinking-making and introduces a dramaturgical mode of looking at performances and the processes in which they are created. The second part of the book discusses the performances and creative processes of Manuela Infante, Julian Hetzel, Ivo van Hove, Anouk van Dijk, Falk Richter, Milo Rau, Kris Verdonck, Death Centre, Hotel Modern, Jr.cE.sA.r , Emio Greco and Pieter C. Scholten, Dries Verhoeven, the LGB Society of Mind, Sanja Mitrovic, and Amanda Pina. Showing how ways of making and ways of doing dramaturgy mutually inform each other, this book is an essential resource for students and others aspiring to develop their own dramaturgical practice. Maaike Bleeker is Professor of Theatre, Dance and Performance Studies at Utrecht University, Netherlands. As a dramaturg, she worked with theatre directors and choreographers on a wide variety of projects. Moving back and forth between theory and practice, she investigates thinking as material and embodied practice, and making theatre as an expression of such thinking. .
Note
Includes index.
Bibliography, etc. Note
References -- Chapter 3: Doing Dramaturgy -- 3.1 Attending to Process -- 3.2 Inhabiting Process -- 3.2.1 Speculating -- 3.2.2 Analyzing -- 3.2.3 Feeding -- 3.2.4 Articulating -- 3.2.5 Questioning -- 3.2.6 Creating Conditions -- 3.2.7 Structuring -- 3.3 From Process to Planet -- 3.4 Enter the Dramaturg -- 3.5 Where to Begin? -- References -- Chapter 4: A Dramaturgical Mode of Looking -- 4.1 The Apparatus -- 4.2 Six Sets of Questions -- 4.2.1 The Space-Time Continuum That Is the Planet -- 4.2.2 Social Life on the Planet -- 4.2.3 Course of Events -- 4.2.4 Spectatorship
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Series
New dramaturgies (Houndmills, Basingstoke, England)