ABSTRACT

From its very beginnings, theatre has been both an art and a public space, shared by actors and spectators. As a result, its entity and history is intimately tied to politics: a politics of inclusion and exclusion, of distributions and placements, of spatial appropriation and utopian concepts. This collection examines what is at stake when a theatrical space is created and when a performance takes place; it asks under what circumstances the topology of theatre becomes political.

The book approaches this issue from various angles, taking theatre as a cultural paradigm for political dimensions of space in its respective historical context. Visiting the political dimensions of theatrical space in both theatre history and contemporary performance, the volume responds to the so-called spatial turn in cultural and historical studies, and questions a politics of aesthetics that is discussed in continental philosophy. The book visits different levels and linkages between aesthetic theory and geography, art and sociology, architecture and political theory, and geometry and history, shedding new light on theatre, politics, and space, thereby transforming this historically intertwined triad into a transdisciplinary theme.

chapter |12 pages

Introduction

part I|114 pages

Placements and Bounderies

chapter 1|16 pages

The Theatre ici

chapter 3|20 pages

What Time is This Place?

Continuity, Conflict, and the Right to the City—Lessons From Haymarket Square

chapter 4|15 pages

Performing Like a City

London's South Bank and the Cultural Politics of Urban Governance

chapter 5|19 pages

What is Sydney about Sydney Theatre?

Performance Space and the Creation of a “Matrix of Sensibility”

chapter 6|14 pages

Thresholds of Tolerence

Censorship, Artistic Freedom, and the Theatrical Public Sphere

chapter 7|13 pages

“Set in Poland, That is to Say Nowhere”

Alfred Jarry and the Politics of Topological Space

part II|89 pages

Utopia and Heterotopia

chapter 8|13 pages

Equality and Theatre Architecture

Voltaire's Private Theatre

chapter 10|16 pages

Heterotopias of the Public Sphere

Theatre and Festival around 1800

chapter 12|18 pages

Opéra Pagaï's Entreprise de Détournement

Collages of Geographic, Imaginary, and Discursive Spaces

part III|80 pages

Strategies of Spatial Appropriation

chapter 14|12 pages

“Moment to Moment—Space”

The Architecture Performances of Gordon Matta-Clark

chapter 15|14 pages

Uncanny Connections

William Forsythe's Choreographic Installations

chapter 16|11 pages

Change through Rapprochement

Spatial Practices in Contemporary Performances

chapter 17|21 pages

Life Politics/Life Aesthetics

Environmental Performance in red, black & GREEN: a blues