Skip to main content
Taylor & Francis Group Logo
    Advanced Search

    Click here to search products using title name,author name and keywords.

    • Login
    • Hi, User  
      • Your Account
      • Logout
      Advanced Search

      Click here to search products using title name,author name and keywords.

      Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.

      Book

      Staging and Re-cycling
      loading

      Book

      Staging and Re-cycling

      DOI link for Staging and Re-cycling

      Staging and Re-cycling book

      Retrieving, Reflecting and Re-framing the Archive

      Staging and Re-cycling

      DOI link for Staging and Re-cycling

      Staging and Re-cycling book

      Retrieving, Reflecting and Re-framing the Archive
      Edited ByJohn Keefe, Knut Ove Arntzen
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2020
      eBook Published 17 July 2020
      Pub. Location London
      Imprint Routledge
      DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003015895
      Pages 264
      eBook ISBN 9781003015895
      Subjects Arts
      Share
      Share

      Get Citation

      Keefe, J., & Arntzen, K.O. (Eds.). (2020). Staging and Re-cycling: Retrieving, Reflecting and Re-framing the Archive (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003015895

      ABSTRACT

      In Staging and Re- cycling , John Keefe and Knut Ove Arntzen re-visit and reappraise a selection of their work to explore how the retrieval, re-approaching and re-framing of material can offer pathways for new work and new thinking.

      The book includes a collection of reprinted and first-published (although previously presented) textual material interspersed with editorial material – reflective essays from John and Knut on these pieces from the archives and original essays from invited scholars that explore the theme of repetition and re-cycling. The project has a number of aims: to suggest how the status of ‘new’ with regard to academic and staged dramaturgical materials may be reframed; to re-examine these through certain lenses and concepts (re-cycling; re-working; the spectator; landscape, post- and other dramaturgies); to explore the possibilities of critique offered by particular modes of juxtaposition, dialogue and dialectic; to offer further provocations to received ideas; and to retrieve and re-approach material, once published or presented, that becomes ‘lost’ in archives or on library shelves. As shown here, the role of the hyphen acts as an indicator to the status of ‘re-’ in relation to the ‘new’.

      Written for scholars and academics, researchers, undergraduate and postgraduate students, and practitioners working in all forms for theatre and performance, Staging and Re-cycling suggests a new form of dialogue between work, authors and readers, and draws out threads that extend back into the past and potentially forward into the future.

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      chapter Chapter 1|9 pages

      Editorial introduction

      ByJohn Keefe, Knut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 2|8 pages

      Play Beckett: Beckett’s performance dramaturgy as total theatre

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 3|9 pages

      The PG and FPG: Stage action or stage metaphysics?

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 4|9 pages

      Essay 1: Archival foundations and first reflections

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 5|6 pages

      A letter on recycling Sam

      ByRichard Cuming

      chapter Chapter 6|12 pages

      Dramaturgical dissolution in the ambient

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 7|13 pages

      The resurrected theatre machine: A postdramatic paradox

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 8|8 pages

      Essay 1: Theatre studies, self-reflection and creativity: Understanding theory through metaphors

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 9|11 pages

      Berkoff’s ‘Londons’: Staging psycho-geographies of the feared and the ecstatic

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 10|11 pages

      Recycling sources and experiencing physical theatre in educating professionals

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 11|10 pages

      Essay 2: Circling around: Looking(s) and empathies

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 12|8 pages

      Retaining and reframing: Notes on processes of remembering in Rosemary Butcher’s choreography-making

      ByStefanie Sachsenmaier

      chapter Chapter 13|5 pages

      On telling the world and ‘recycling’ in the new theatre

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 14|8 pages

      Essay 2: Researching, re-making, re-cycling

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 15|6 pages

      Recycling, situationism and postspectacular theatre

      ByAndré Eiermann

      chapter Chapter 16|10 pages

      Play(ing) it again: Recycling as theatres, histories, memories

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 17|12 pages

      Essay 3: Spectatorial ghosts

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 18|11 pages

      Re-cycle/up-cycle: A conversation

      ByGian Carlo Rossi, Jacek Ludwig Scarso

      chapter Chapter 19|15 pages

      Producing marginality and post-mainstream in independent theatre

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 20|8 pages

      Essay 3: Nordic inter-action: Avant-garde to visual performance – the ritualistic and mechanical

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 21|10 pages

      Impossible Theatres and the possible; some dramaturgical provocations and responses to the opening statement, and implications

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 22|8 pages

      Essay 4: Further paths, returning threads

      ByJohn Keefe

      chapter Chapter 23|14 pages

      Drama in landscapes

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 24|7 pages

      Essay 4: Directing and choreographing as a free and open mise-en-scène: From risky auteurship to re-cycling theatre

      ByKnut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 25|6 pages

      Dancing with your cycle – theatre and performance research as archivist practice

      ByAnnelis Kuhlmann

      chapter Chapter 26|6 pages

      Editorial conclusion

      ByJohn Keefe, Knut Ove Arntzen

      chapter Chapter 27|2 pages

      Selected other published material

      ByJohn Keefe, Knut Ove Arntzen
      T&F logoTaylor & Francis Group logo
      • Policies
        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms & Conditions
        • Cookie Policy
        • Privacy Policy
        • Terms & Conditions
        • Cookie Policy
      • Journals
        • Taylor & Francis Online
        • CogentOA
        • Taylor & Francis Online
        • CogentOA
      • Corporate
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
        • Taylor & Francis Group
      • Help & Contact
        • Students/Researchers
        • Librarians/Institutions
        • Students/Researchers
        • Librarians/Institutions
      • Connect with us

      Connect with us

      Registered in England & Wales No. 3099067
      5 Howick Place | London | SW1P 1WG © 2022 Informa UK Limited