Introduction: Text & Presentation

IF 0.1 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER COMPARATIVE DRAMA Pub Date : 2024-03-06 DOI:10.1353/cdr.2024.a920783
Amy Muse, Victoria Scrimer
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Insofar as the history of the Comparative Drama Conference constitutes a dramatic narrative, 2023 put us squarely in the set-up, that anticipatory moment when the heretofore unnoticed mechanisms of change begin to make their work visible.</p> <p>This special issue of <em>Comparative Drama</em> announces a partnership between <em>Comparative Drama</em> and the Comparative Drama Conference—a journal and conference that share a name and a commitment to international, interdisciplinary scholarship on dramatic literature, but, until now, have had no formal connection. From 1980–2021, a selection <strong>[End Page 1]</strong> of the best papers from each year's Comparative Drama Conference were published in an annual book series, <em>Text &amp; Presentation</em>. Going forward, one annual issue of <em>Comparative Drama</em> will be devoted to essays developed from the previous year's conference. The Comparative Drama Conference, founded in 1977 by Karelisa Hartigan at the University of Florida, has been a lively intellectual gathering space for scholars, playwrights, dramaturgs, critics, directors, designers, and performers for forty-five years. Over the years it has been hosted by Ohio State University (directed by Stratos Constantinidis), Loyola Marymount University (Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr.), Stevenson University (Laura Snyder), and, for a six-year run, by Rollins College under the direction of Bill Boles. Beginning in 2025, new leaders will take the reins: Mark O'Thomas and Nicholas Holden at the London Academy of Music and Drama (LAMDA) and Baron Kelly and Ann Shanahan at the University of Wisconsin-Madison will serve as co-directors. For the following six years (2025–2030), the Comparative Drama Conference's annual meeting will alternate between London, England and Madison, Wisconsin, making in-person participation a bit easier for many in our international community of scholars and encouraging us all to invest in warmer business casual attire.</p> <p>Change, as it turns out, is an appropriate thematic framework for bringing together the essays in this special issue of <em>Comparative Drama</em>. Change is the lifeblood of good theatre. In <em>The Empty Space</em>, Peter Brook famously quipped that \"truth in theatre is always on the move.\" He suggested that theatre (a vital theatre, anyway) is a place and a practice of change—from the characters on the page, to the actors on the stage, and the audience in the house. A living theatre invites improvisation, it innovates, it strays, it changes the rules, and, at its best, it changes the way we see the world. 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Hnath's many other plays likewise seem to attest to the fact that when you play with them, the best ideas in the theatre don't break—they bounce, coming back at us from new and surprising angles. Among many other topics, Hnath's generous and wide-ranging discussion with Malarcher touches upon his approach to teaching playwriting at NYU...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":39600,"journal":{"name":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","volume":"12 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-03-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"COMPARATIVE DRAMA","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/cdr.2024.a920783","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"THEATER","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Introduction:Text & Presentation
  • Amy Muse and Victoria Scrimer

Often, especially of late, great changes seem to come upon us suddenly. We awake one day and the world is altered, for better or worse, demanding of us a new normal. But anyone who studies drama knows that long before any big reveal on stage, change is afoot just beneath the surface of every line and gesture. As astute observers, we look for the setup—a prophesy here, a conspicuous stage prop there—that will clue us in to what lies ahead, and we wait for the pay-off. Insofar as the history of the Comparative Drama Conference constitutes a dramatic narrative, 2023 put us squarely in the set-up, that anticipatory moment when the heretofore unnoticed mechanisms of change begin to make their work visible.

This special issue of Comparative Drama announces a partnership between Comparative Drama and the Comparative Drama Conference—a journal and conference that share a name and a commitment to international, interdisciplinary scholarship on dramatic literature, but, until now, have had no formal connection. From 1980–2021, a selection [End Page 1] of the best papers from each year's Comparative Drama Conference were published in an annual book series, Text & Presentation. Going forward, one annual issue of Comparative Drama will be devoted to essays developed from the previous year's conference. The Comparative Drama Conference, founded in 1977 by Karelisa Hartigan at the University of Florida, has been a lively intellectual gathering space for scholars, playwrights, dramaturgs, critics, directors, designers, and performers for forty-five years. Over the years it has been hosted by Ohio State University (directed by Stratos Constantinidis), Loyola Marymount University (Kevin J. Wetmore, Jr.), Stevenson University (Laura Snyder), and, for a six-year run, by Rollins College under the direction of Bill Boles. Beginning in 2025, new leaders will take the reins: Mark O'Thomas and Nicholas Holden at the London Academy of Music and Drama (LAMDA) and Baron Kelly and Ann Shanahan at the University of Wisconsin-Madison will serve as co-directors. For the following six years (2025–2030), the Comparative Drama Conference's annual meeting will alternate between London, England and Madison, Wisconsin, making in-person participation a bit easier for many in our international community of scholars and encouraging us all to invest in warmer business casual attire.

Change, as it turns out, is an appropriate thematic framework for bringing together the essays in this special issue of Comparative Drama. Change is the lifeblood of good theatre. In The Empty Space, Peter Brook famously quipped that "truth in theatre is always on the move." He suggested that theatre (a vital theatre, anyway) is a place and a practice of change—from the characters on the page, to the actors on the stage, and the audience in the house. A living theatre invites improvisation, it innovates, it strays, it changes the rules, and, at its best, it changes the way we see the world. The nine essays featured here started their lives as papers given at the 2023 Comparative Drama Conference. Not only have they undergone transformations in their journeys from conference presentations to essays, all celebrate and contribute to a theatre that boldly changes, adapts, and shapeshifts to meet the psychological, political, social, and technological present and helps its audiences to do the same.

Leading off this special CDC issue is a transcript of the conference's 2023 keynote event, Jay Malarcher's interview with playwright Lucas Hnath, whose sequel to A Doll's House refuses to enshrine Ibsen's [End Page 2] masterpiece in that great embalming fluid: reverence. A Doll's House, Part 2 (2017), as its cheeky title might imply, dares instead to pluck our darling from its pedestal and toss its foundational ideas around on stage in an affectionately irreverent game of intellectual tennis. Hnath's many other plays likewise seem to attest to the fact that when you play with them, the best ideas in the theatre don't break—they bounce, coming back at us from new and surprising angles. Among many other topics, Hnath's generous and wide-ranging discussion with Malarcher touches upon his approach to teaching playwriting at NYU...

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导言:文本与演示
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 导言:文本和演示 艾米-缪斯和维多利亚-斯克里默 经常,尤其是最近,巨大的变化似乎突然降临到我们头上。有一天我们醒来,世界已经改变,无论好坏,我们都需要一种新的常态。但是,任何研究戏剧的人都知道,在舞台上发生任何重大变化之前,变化就已经在每一句台词和每一个动作的表面之下悄然发生了。作为一个敏锐的观察者,我们会寻找各种铺垫--这里的预言,那里显眼的舞台道具--这些都会为我们揭示未来的线索,然后我们等待着收获。就比较戏剧会议的历史构成的戏剧叙事而言,2023 年让我们正中下怀,这是一个充满期待的时刻,在这个时刻,之前未曾注意到的变革机制开始显现其作用。本期《比较戏剧》特刊宣布了《比较戏剧》与比较戏剧会议之间的合作关系--两者同名同姓,都致力于戏剧文学的国际性、跨学科学术研究,但直到现在还没有正式的联系。从 1980 年到 2021 年,《比较戏剧》每年都会精选 [第 1 页完] 每年比较戏剧会议上的优秀论文,编成丛书《文本与演示》(Text & Presentation)出版。今后,每年一期的《比较戏剧》将专门刊载前一年会议上发表的论文。比较戏剧会议于 1977 年由卡雷丽莎-哈蒂根(Karelisa Hartigan)在佛罗里达大学创立,四十五年来一直是学者、剧作家、剧作家、评论家、导演、设计师和表演者活跃的思想交流场所。多年来,俄亥俄州立大学(由斯特拉托斯-康斯坦丁尼蒂斯执导)、洛约拉-玛丽蒙特大学(小凯文-J-韦特莫尔)、史蒂文森大学(劳拉-斯奈德)和罗林斯学院(由比尔-博尔斯执导,为期六年)都曾是该戏剧节的主办方。从 2025 年开始,将由新的领导者接管:伦敦音乐与戏剧学院(LAMDA)的马克-奥-托马斯(Mark O'Thomas)和尼古拉斯-霍尔登(Nicholas Holden)以及威斯康星大学麦迪逊分校的凯利男爵(Baron Kelly)和安-沙纳汉(Ann Shanahan)将担任联合总监。在接下来的六年中(2025-2030 年),比较戏剧大会的年会将在英国伦敦和威斯康星州麦迪逊之间轮流举行,这将为我们国际学者社区中的许多人亲自参加年会提供更多便利,同时也鼓励我们为自己添置更暖和的商务便装。事实证明,"变化 "是汇集本期《比较戏剧》特刊文章的恰当主题框架。变化是优秀戏剧的生命线。彼得-布鲁克(Peter Brook)在《空的空间》(The Empty Space)一书中有一句著名的名言:"戏剧中的真理总是在运动"。他认为,戏剧(无论如何,一个有生命力的戏剧)是一个变化的场所和实践--从书页上的人物,到舞台上的演员,再到观众席上的观众。一个有生命力的剧院会邀请即兴创作,会创新,会游离,会改变规则,在最好的情况下,它会改变我们看世界的方式。这里介绍的九篇论文最初是在 2023 年比较戏剧大会上发表的论文。它们不仅经历了从会议演讲到论文的转变,而且都赞美并促进了戏剧大胆地改变、调整和变形,以适应心理、政治、社会和技术的现状,并帮助观众也这样做。本期 CDC 特刊的开篇是会议 2023 年主题活动的实录,杰伊-马拉彻(Jay Malarcher)对剧作家卢卡斯-赫纳特(Lucas Hnath)的访谈,赫纳特的作品《玩偶之家》续集拒绝将易卜生的 [第 2 页完] 代表作置于伟大的防腐剂中:崇敬。玩偶之家》第二部(2017),正如其厚颜无耻的标题所暗示的那样,敢于将我们的宠儿从它的基座上摘下来,在舞台上将它的基本思想抛来抛去,来一场亲切而不失幽默的智力网球游戏。赫纳特的许多其他戏剧作品似乎也证明了这样一个事实:当你玩弄它们时,戏剧中最好的想法不会破碎--它们会反弹,从新的和令人惊讶的角度回到我们身边。在与马拉彻进行的慷慨而广泛的讨论中,赫纳特还谈到了他在纽约大学教授剧本创作的方法......
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来源期刊
COMPARATIVE DRAMA
COMPARATIVE DRAMA Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Comparative Drama (ISSN 0010-4078) is a scholarly journal devoted to studies international in spirit and interdisciplinary in scope; it is published quarterly (Spring, Summer, Fall, and Winter) at Western Michigan University
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In Memoriam: Clifford O. Davidson: 1932–2024 "Simply Sitting in a Chair": Questioning Representational Practice and Dramatic Convention in Marguerite Duras's L'Amante anglaise and The Viaducts of Seine-et-Oise Rewriting Idolatry: Doctor Faustus and Romeo and Juliet Measuring Protagonism in Early Modern European Theatre: A Distant Reading of the Character of Sophonisba Theater, War, and Revolution in Eighteenth-Century France and Its Empire by Logan J. Connors (review)
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