ABSTRACT

This book is about some of the ways we remember the dead through performance. It examines the dramaturgical techniques and strategies that enable artists to respond to the imperative: ‘Remember Me’ – the command King Hamlet’s ghost gives to his son in Shakespeare’s famous tragedy, Hamlet. The book develops the concept of hauntological dramaturgy by engaging with a series of performances that commemorate, celebrate, investigate, and sometimes seek justice for the dead.

It draws on three interrelated discourses on haunting: Derrida’s hauntology with its ethical exhortation to be with ghosts and listen to ghosts; Abraham and Torok’s psychoanalytic account of the role spectres play in the transmission of intergenerational trauma; and, finally, Mark Fisher's and Simon Reynolds’ development of Derrida’s ideas within the field of popular culture. Taken together, these writers, in different ways, suggest strategies for reading and creating performances concerned with questions of commemoration. Case studies focus on a set of known and unknown figures, including Ian Charleson, Spalding Gray and David Bowie.

This study will be of great interest to students, scholars and practitioners working within theatre and performance studies as well as philosophy and cultural studies.

chapter |20 pages

Introduction

Hauntological Dramaturgy

chapter 2|19 pages

Re-member Me

Ian Charleson

chapter 4|23 pages

Re-membering Anto D'Cruz

Intergenerational Trauma and Object-Oriented Dramaturgy

chapter 5|27 pages

Re-membering David McComb

Sonic Hauntology and Uncanny Australia

chapter 6|20 pages

Can't Help Thinking About ‘Me’

The Hauntological Dimensions of David Bowie's ‘Auto-eulogy’