Naked villainy: Encounters with an archetype of disfigurement

Ben LaMontagne-Schenck
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

This research report is focused on an emergent methodology developed to support a transformational actor‐researcher engaged in heuristic inquiry. Rooted in Stanislavskian practices, transformational acting outlines a character building technique that is, at its core, a physical process. By including costume as an integral component of this physical character-building process, the actor is equipped with a material tool with which they may alter their means of perception. A combined reading of modern cognitive theory and feminist theory asserts that such perceptual alterations as costume affords may then result in a fundamental shift in the performer’s identity, facilitating a lived experience of the character’s identity. Considering costume within a Stanislavskian context introduces a material set of given circumstances; an embodied experience of another’s possibilities or impossibilities of movement. While these perceptual changes stimulate transformation, an actor‐researcher may also find themselves in active collaboration with a ‘character’ outside of themselves, potentially lending new-found insight within a research setting. Starting from a materialist approach to character, I chose to use Shakespeare’s character Richard III as a case study to test my hypothesis. What I soon began to realize was that this unidentified ‘materiality’ that I had been drawn to could not be distinguished from Richard’s ‘disability’. I began to ask, what are the ethical implications of an actor donning various external costume-based tools in embodying a disabled character? How does such an approach help us move away from the medical model of disability to the social, and perhaps even towards the affirmative and to resituate disability as a lived experience rather than metaphor? This research report details an emergent methodology confronted with the ethical implications of costume’s impact on the portrayal and understanding of disability in theatre today.
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赤裸裸的邪恶:遇到毁容的原型
本研究报告的重点是开发一种新兴方法,以支持从事启发式调查的转型行为者-研究人员。基于斯坦尼斯拉夫斯基的实践,转型表演概述了一种角色塑造技巧,其核心是一个物理过程。通过将服装作为这种物理角色塑造过程的一个组成部分,演员就拥有了一种物质工具,可以改变他们的感知方式。对现代认知理论和女权主义理论的综合解读表明,服装所带来的这种感知变化可能会导致表演者身份的根本转变,促进角色身份的生活体验。在斯坦尼斯拉夫斯基的语境中考虑服装引入了一组特定的物质环境;对另一个人可能或不可能运动的具体体验。当这些感知变化刺激转变时,演员-研究人员也可能发现自己与自己之外的“角色”积极合作,可能会在研究环境中提供新发现的见解。从唯物主义的角度出发,我选择用莎士比亚的角色理查三世作为案例研究来检验我的假设。我很快就意识到,吸引我的这种不确定的“物质性”无法与理查德的“残疾”区分开来。我开始问,一个演员穿上各种各样的外部服装工具来体现一个残疾人角色,这有什么道德含义?这种方法如何帮助我们从残疾的医学模式转向社会模式,甚至可能是积极的,并将残疾视为一种生活经历,而不是隐喻?本研究报告详细介绍了一种新兴的方法,该方法面临着服装对当今戏剧中对残疾的描绘和理解的影响的伦理含义。
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