ABSTRACT

This book offers a timely discussion about the interventions and tensions between two contested and contentious fields, performance and phenomenology, with international case studies that map an emerging twenty-first century terrain of critical and performance practice. Building on the foundational texts of both fields that established the performativity of perception and cognition, Performance and Phenomenology continues a tradition that considers experience to be the foundation of being and meaning. Acknowledging the history and critical polemics against phenomenological methodology and against performance as a field of study and category of artistic production, the volume provides both an introduction to core thinkers and an expansion on their ideas in a wide range of case studies. Whether addressing the use of dead animals in performance, actor training, the legal implications of thinking phenomenologically about how we walk, or the intertwining of digital and analog perception, each chapter explores a world comprised of embodied action and thought. The established and emerging scholars contributing to the volume develop insights central to the phenomenological tradition while expanding on the work of contemporary theorists and performers. In asking why performance and phenomenology belong in conversation together, the book suggests how they can transform each other in the process and what is at stake in this transformation.

chapter |15 pages

The Stage Struck Out of the World

Theatricality and Husserl's Phenomenology of Theatre, 1905–1918

chapter |19 pages

Movement as Lived Abstraction

The Logic of the Cut

chapter |22 pages

The Actor's Work on Attention, Awareness, and Active Imagination

Between Phenomenology, Cognitive Science, and Practices of Acting

chapter |14 pages

Playing the Subject Card

Strategies of the Subjective

chapter |10 pages

Fleshing Dead Animals

Sensory Body Phenomenology in Performance

chapter |19 pages

Vibrant Materials

The Agency of Things in the Context of Scenography

chapter |21 pages

The In-Common of Phenomenology

Performing KMA's Congregation

chapter |13 pages

Transracial Intimacy and “Race Performativity”

Recognition and Destabilizing the Nation's Racial Contract

chapter |18 pages

Passing Period

Gender, Aggression, and the Phenomenology of Walking

chapter |18 pages

Doing Phenomenology

The Empathetic Implications of Crew's Head-Swap Technology in ‘W’ (Double U)

chapter |23 pages

Performance as Media Affect

The Phenomenology of Human Implication in Jordan Crandall's Gatherings