Zeitraum und Raumzeit: Dimensionen zeitlicher und räumlicher Narration im Theater

IF 0.6 0 LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM Journal of Literary Theory Pub Date : 2019-09-06 DOI:10.1515/jlt-2019-0007
J. Horstmann
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This turn towards temporality is also present in theories of postdramatic theater (by Hans-Thies Lehman) and performance art. Narrating always takes place in time; likewise, every performance is a handling of and an encounter with time. Furthermore, performed narration gains a concrete spatial setting by virtue of its location on a stage or comparable performance area, so that the spatial structures contained in this setting exist in relation to the temporal structures of the act of theatrical telling, as well as the content of what is told. Both temporal and spatial structures of theater stagings can be systematically described and analyzed with a narratological vocabulary. With references to Seymour Chatman, Käte Hamburger and Markus Kuhn among others, the contribution discusses how narratological parameters for the analysis of temporal and spatial relations can be productively expanded in relation to theater and performance analysis. For exemplary purposes, it refers to Dimiter Gotscheff’s staging of Peter Handke’s Immer noch Sturm (which premiered in 2011 at the Thalia Theater Hamburg in cooperation with the Salzburger Festspiele), focusing on its transmedial broadening of temporal categories like order, duration, and frequency, and subsequent, prior, or simultaneous narration. The broadening itself proves feasible since all categories of temporal narration can be applied to performative narration in the theater – at times even more fruitfully than in written language, as is the case, for example, with the concept of ›duration‹. The concept of ›time of narration‹ too can be productively applied to theater. Whilst a subsequent narration is frequently considered the standard case in written-language narratives on the one hand – a conclusion that is, however, only correct if the narrator figure and narrative stand in spatiotemporal relation to one another, i. e. if a homodiegetic narrator figure is present – it is commonly held that in scenic-performed narration, on the other hand, the telling and the told take place simultaneously. The present contribution argues against this interpretation, as it stems from a misguided understanding of the ›liveness‹ of performance. ›Liveness‹ refers only to the relationship between viewers and performers and their respective presence, but not to their temporal and spatial relationship to the told. Rather, the following will argue that the time of narration in theater (as well as in film) stays unmarked in most cases. It is possible, however, to stage subsequent, prior, or simultaneous narration, too. Immer noch Sturm is one example for a performed subsequent narration. For audiovisual narration, then, a special case of iterative narration (telling once what happened n times) can be identified, which is to tell a few times (n minus x) what happened n times. As an additional category for the analysis of narrative temporality in audiovisual narrative media, I propose what I venture to call ›synchronized narration‹, in order to describe the specificity of spatiotemporal relations in performance. In synchronized narration, two or more events (that happen at different places or times in the narrative world) are shown at the same time on stage. This synchronized performance of several events is only realizable within the audiovisual dimension of spatial narration and not in written-language based narration. Furthermore, for narrative space relations the categories ›space covering‹, ›space extending‹, and ›space reducing narration‹ are suggested in order to analyze the relationships between discourse space and story space(s). Discourse space emerges in the concrete physical space of the performance when narrativity is present. Within this discourse space any amount of story spaces (with any expansion) can emerge. However, whilst in time-extending narration the time of the telling is longer than the time of the told, in space-extending narration the told space is bigger than the space of the telling. This principle is analogously valid for time-reducing or space-reducing narration. The transmission and media-specific broadening of temporal and spatial narratological parameters reveals how time and space form a continuum and should thus be linked and discussed alongside one another in analytical approaches to narrative artifacts. The staging of Immer noch Sturm actualizes a metaleptic structure, in which temporal borders are systematically dissolved and the overstepping of spatial borders becomes an indicator for the merging of different temporal levels. Referring back to established narratological parameters and developing analogous conceptual tools for narrative space facilitates a comparative analysis both of specific narratives and of narrative media and thus not only offers a productive challenge of classical narratological parameters, but allows to investigate and construct a holistic – if culture-specific – overall view of narration.","PeriodicalId":42872,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Literary Theory","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.6000,"publicationDate":"2019-09-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://sci-hub-pdf.com/10.1515/jlt-2019-0007","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Literary Theory","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1515/jlt-2019-0007","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Abstract The positioning in space and time of performed narration in theater poses a specific challenge to classical narratological categories of structuralist descent (developed, for example, by Gérard Genette or Wolf Schmid, for the analysis of narrative fiction). Time is the phenomenon which connects narratology and theater studies: on the one hand, it provides the basis for nearly every definition of narrativity; on the other, it grounds a number of different methodologies for the analysis of theater stagings, as well as theories of performance – with their emphasis on transience, the ephemeral, and the unrepeatable, singular or transitory nature of the technically unreproducible art of theater (e. g. by Erika Fischer-Lichte). This turn towards temporality is also present in theories of postdramatic theater (by Hans-Thies Lehman) and performance art. Narrating always takes place in time; likewise, every performance is a handling of and an encounter with time. Furthermore, performed narration gains a concrete spatial setting by virtue of its location on a stage or comparable performance area, so that the spatial structures contained in this setting exist in relation to the temporal structures of the act of theatrical telling, as well as the content of what is told. Both temporal and spatial structures of theater stagings can be systematically described and analyzed with a narratological vocabulary. With references to Seymour Chatman, Käte Hamburger and Markus Kuhn among others, the contribution discusses how narratological parameters for the analysis of temporal and spatial relations can be productively expanded in relation to theater and performance analysis. For exemplary purposes, it refers to Dimiter Gotscheff’s staging of Peter Handke’s Immer noch Sturm (which premiered in 2011 at the Thalia Theater Hamburg in cooperation with the Salzburger Festspiele), focusing on its transmedial broadening of temporal categories like order, duration, and frequency, and subsequent, prior, or simultaneous narration. The broadening itself proves feasible since all categories of temporal narration can be applied to performative narration in the theater – at times even more fruitfully than in written language, as is the case, for example, with the concept of ›duration‹. The concept of ›time of narration‹ too can be productively applied to theater. Whilst a subsequent narration is frequently considered the standard case in written-language narratives on the one hand – a conclusion that is, however, only correct if the narrator figure and narrative stand in spatiotemporal relation to one another, i. e. if a homodiegetic narrator figure is present – it is commonly held that in scenic-performed narration, on the other hand, the telling and the told take place simultaneously. The present contribution argues against this interpretation, as it stems from a misguided understanding of the ›liveness‹ of performance. ›Liveness‹ refers only to the relationship between viewers and performers and their respective presence, but not to their temporal and spatial relationship to the told. Rather, the following will argue that the time of narration in theater (as well as in film) stays unmarked in most cases. It is possible, however, to stage subsequent, prior, or simultaneous narration, too. Immer noch Sturm is one example for a performed subsequent narration. For audiovisual narration, then, a special case of iterative narration (telling once what happened n times) can be identified, which is to tell a few times (n minus x) what happened n times. As an additional category for the analysis of narrative temporality in audiovisual narrative media, I propose what I venture to call ›synchronized narration‹, in order to describe the specificity of spatiotemporal relations in performance. In synchronized narration, two or more events (that happen at different places or times in the narrative world) are shown at the same time on stage. This synchronized performance of several events is only realizable within the audiovisual dimension of spatial narration and not in written-language based narration. Furthermore, for narrative space relations the categories ›space covering‹, ›space extending‹, and ›space reducing narration‹ are suggested in order to analyze the relationships between discourse space and story space(s). Discourse space emerges in the concrete physical space of the performance when narrativity is present. Within this discourse space any amount of story spaces (with any expansion) can emerge. However, whilst in time-extending narration the time of the telling is longer than the time of the told, in space-extending narration the told space is bigger than the space of the telling. This principle is analogously valid for time-reducing or space-reducing narration. The transmission and media-specific broadening of temporal and spatial narratological parameters reveals how time and space form a continuum and should thus be linked and discussed alongside one another in analytical approaches to narrative artifacts. The staging of Immer noch Sturm actualizes a metaleptic structure, in which temporal borders are systematically dissolved and the overstepping of spatial borders becomes an indicator for the merging of different temporal levels. Referring back to established narratological parameters and developing analogous conceptual tools for narrative space facilitates a comparative analysis both of specific narratives and of narrative media and thus not only offers a productive challenge of classical narratological parameters, but allows to investigate and construct a holistic – if culture-specific – overall view of narration.
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时间和时间三维的幻觉时空幻觉
戏剧表演叙事在空间和时间上的定位对结构主义传统的叙述性范畴(如格姆扎尔德·杰内特或沃尔夫·施密德为分析叙事小说而发展起来的)提出了特殊的挑战。时间是将叙事学与戏剧研究联系起来的现象:一方面,它为几乎所有的叙事学定义提供了基础;另一方面,它为戏剧表演的分析提供了许多不同的方法,以及表演理论——它们强调戏剧艺术在技术上不可复制的短暂性、短暂性和不可重复性、奇异性或短暂性。埃里卡·费舍尔-利希特)。这种对时间性的转向也出现在后戏剧戏剧(汉斯-蒂斯·雷曼)和表演艺术的理论中。叙述总是发生在时间上;同样,每一场表演都是对时间的处理和遭遇。此外,表演叙事凭借其在舞台或类似表演区域的位置获得了具体的空间设置,因此,这种设置中包含的空间结构与戏剧叙事行为的时间结构以及所讲述的内容有关。剧场舞台的时间和空间结构都可以用叙事学词汇来系统地描述和分析。参考Seymour Chatman, Käte Hamburger和Markus Kuhn等人的观点,本文讨论了时间和空间关系分析的叙事学参数如何在戏剧和表演分析中得到有效扩展。举个例子,它指的是Dimiter Gotscheff在Peter Handke的Immer noch Sturm(2011年在汉堡塔利亚剧院与萨尔茨堡艺术节合作首演)的舞台,重点是它对时间类别的跨媒介拓宽,如顺序、持续时间和频率,以及随后、之前或同时叙述。扩展本身被证明是可行的,因为所有类别的时间叙事都可以应用于戏剧中的表演叙事——有时甚至比书面语言更富有成效,例如,“持续时间”的概念。“叙述时间”的概念也可以有效地应用于戏剧。一方面,随后的叙述经常被认为是书面语言叙事的标准案例——然而,只有当叙述者的形象和叙述处于彼此的时空关系中时,这个结论才是正确的。如果有一个同叙事的叙述者在场——另一方面,人们通常认为,在风景表演叙事中,讲述和被讲述是同时发生的。目前的贡献反对这种解释,因为它源于对表演的“活力”的错误理解。“生动”仅指观众和表演者之间的关系以及他们各自的存在,而不是他们与被告知者的时间和空间关系。更确切地说,下面将论证戏剧(以及电影)的叙述时间在大多数情况下是没有标记的。然而,也可以进行随后的、先前的或同时的叙述。Immer noch Sturm是表演的后续叙述的一个例子。那么,对于视听叙事,可以识别出一种特殊的迭代叙事(讲述一次发生了n次的事情),即讲述几次(n - x)发生了n次的事情。作为对视听叙事媒介中叙事时间性分析的一个附加范畴,我冒昧地提出了我所谓的“同步叙事”,以描述表演中时空关系的特殊性。在同步叙事中,两个或两个以上的事件(发生在叙事世界的不同地点或时间)同时在舞台上呈现。这种多个事件的同步表现只能在空间叙事的视听维度中实现,而不能在基于书面语言的叙事中实现。在叙事空间关系方面,提出了“覆盖空间”、“延伸空间”和“缩减叙事空间”的范畴,以分析话语空间与故事空间的关系。当叙事性存在时,话语空间出现在表演的具体物理空间中。在这个话语空间中,可以出现任何数量的故事空间(具有任何扩展)。然而,在时间延伸叙事中,讲述的时间比被讲述的时间长,而在空间延伸叙事中,被讲述的空间比讲述的空间大。这一原则同样适用于缩短时间或缩短空间的叙述。 时间和空间叙事学参数的传播和媒介特定的扩展揭示了时间和空间如何形成一个连续体,因此应该在叙事人工制品的分析方法中相互联系和讨论。Immer noch Sturm的分期实现了一种元性结构,在这种结构中,时间边界被系统地消解,空间边界的超越成为不同时间层次融合的标志。回顾已建立的叙事学参数,并为叙事空间开发类似的概念工具,有助于对具体叙事和叙事媒介进行比较分析,从而不仅对经典叙事学参数提出了富有成果的挑战,而且允许调查和构建一个整体的——如果是文化特定的——叙事的总体观点。
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Journal of Literary Theory
Journal of Literary Theory LITERARY THEORY & CRITICISM-
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