Video:
Theater: Electric Subjectivity, Emulative Authority

dc.creatorReynolds, Bryan
dc.date.accessioned2019-08-28T16:24:07Z
dc.date.available2019-08-28T16:24:07Z
dc.date.issued2010-05-11
dc.description.abstractTheater lovers often explain their devotion through reference to grandly unifying, humanely edifying comforts: that plays can be remarkably faithful to human nature insofar as they represent tragedy, comedy, beauty, and wisdom in ways more authentic, potent or exuberant than other art forms. To an extent, such an explanation may be true, and so it provides a rationale for why audiences attend theater. Nevertheless, it is a sublimation of something no less human, but rather more excessive and fugitive: perhaps the allure and mystery of sex, knowledge, or power, or, as I want to argue, something else and more. Using the theory and methodology of transversal poetics to explore the media of live performance through an excursion into the fields of biology, consciousness studies, primatology, neurochemistry, and cognitive neuroscience, I hope to unveil the incentives and causality behind aesthetic appreciation and audience experience. I hope to show how theater or performance, specifically embodied live art, can achieve a rare magnetism — the magnetic energy it produces — which is grounded in the somatic, emotional, and cognitive transversality it inspires; and, perhaps more importantly, I want to explain how the media of live performance best serves this purpose. Liveness can reverberate with a power of immediacy, arousal, and titillation, but its “transversal performance” can go much deeper, wider, and electric. It is this, acknowledged or not, that has seduced and pleasured generations of theatergoers through live performance. Indeed, liveness can transform the audience into the subjects of performance.en
dc.format.extent00:58:06 hh:mm:ss
dc.identifier.doi10.25969/mediarep/9092
dc.identifier.urihttps:/videos.uni-koeln.de/de/video/index/file_id/2938
dc.identifier.urihttps://mediarep.org/handle/doc/10001
dc.languageeng
dc.publisherUniversität zu Köln/Zentrum für Medienwissenschaften und Moderneforschung
dc.publisher.placeKöln
dc.relation.ispartofseriesCologne Media Lectures
dc.rightsIn Copyrighten
dc.rights.urihttps://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
dc.subjectSubjektivitätde
dc.subjectTheaterde
dc.subjectBewusstseinde
dc.subjectPhänomenologiede
dc.subjectsubjectivityen
dc.subjectPerformance
dc.subjectconsciousnessen
dc.subjecttheatreen
dc.subjectphenomenologyen
dc.subject.ddcddc:792
dc.subject.personWilliam Shakespeare
dc.subject.workHAMLET
dc.titleTheater: Electric Subjectivity, Emulative Authorityen
dc.typeMovingImage
dc.typelecture
dc.type.statuspublishedVersion
dcterms.bibliographicCitationReynolds, Bryan: Theater: Electric Subjectivity, Emulative Authority. (Vortrag, 11.05.2010). Köln: Universität zu Köln/Zentrum für Medienwissenschaften und Moderneforschung (Cologne Media Lectures, 4) DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.25969/mediarep/9092.
dspace.entity.typeVideode_DE
local.identifier.firstpublishedhttps:/videos.uni-koeln.de/de/video/index/file_id/2938
local.source.volume4
local.subject.gndhttps://d-nb.info/gnd/118613723
local.subject.wikidatahttps://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q692
local.subject.wikidatahttps://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q41567

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