“公共希腊主义”和希腊的古代悲剧表演(1975 - 95):仪式探索

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Greek Media and Culture Pub Date : 2021-04-01 DOI:10.1386/jgmc_00028_1
Efthymios Kaltsounas, Tonia Karaoglou, Natalie Minioti, Eleni Papazoglou
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在20世纪的大部分时间里,在希腊所谓的古代戏剧复兴中寻求“希腊”的连续性与本文所称和研究的“仪式探索”密不可分。仪式被理解为两种形式:一种是美学和新古典主义的解释学和表演密码,这些密码被建立和回收——因此:在20世纪30年代至70年代希腊国家剧院的古代悲剧作品中仪式化;另一种主要在20世纪80年代培养,是文化性的,围绕着可以通过直接使用拜占庭和民间仪式元素来追踪和探索连续性的理念。两者都旨在引起观众的一致集体反应:他们变成了一个边缘仪式社区。这是一个在民族中心身份下联系在一起的社区,即希腊人参与希腊(戏剧)现象。起初,通过新古典主义,然后通过民间传说,这种艺术现象被视为记录了一种历时性的、本质上是政治性的现代希腊渴望:与古代的连续性。这些发展与所研究时期更广泛的文化运动相一致,这些运动反映在现代希腊集体意识中对古代的共同想象中,这是一种“公共希腊主义”。演出的新闻接受,除了是研究演出本身的生产工具外,还为观众接受提供了不可或缺的指标。通过对戏剧评论的研究,我们建议探索贪婪定义中的关键转变及其与古董的动态联系。
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‘Communal Hellenism’ and ancient tragedy performances in Greece (1975‐95): The ritual quest
For the better part of the twentieth century, the quest for a ‘Greek’ continuity in the so-called revival of ancient drama in Greece was inextricably linked to what is termed and studied in this paper as a Ritual Quest. Rituality was understood in two forms: one was aesthetic and neoclassicist in its hermeneutic and performative codes, which were established and recycled ‐ and as such: ritualized ‐ in ancient tragedy productions of the National Theatre of Greece from the 1930s to the 1970s; the other, cultivated mainly during the 1980s, was cultural and centred around the idea that continuity can be traced and explored through the direct employment of Byzantine and folk ritual elements. Both aimed at eliciting the cohesive collective response of their spectators: their turning into a liminal ritual community. This was a community tied together under an ethnocentric identity, that of Greeks participating in a Greek (theatrical) phenomenon. At first through neoclassicism, then through folklore, this artistic phenomenon was seen as documenting a diachronic and essentially political modern Greek desideratum: continuity with the ancient past.Such developments were in tune with broader cultural movements in the period under study, which were reflected on the common imaginings of Antiquity in the modern Greek collective ‐ consciousness ‐ a sort of ‘Communal Hellenism’. The press reception of performances, apart from being a productive vehicle for the study of the productions as such, provides indispensable indexes to audience reception. Through the study of theatre reviews, we propose to explore the crucial shifts registered in the definition of Greekness and its dynamic connections to Antiquity.
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来源期刊
Journal of Greek Media and Culture
Journal of Greek Media and Culture Social Sciences-Cultural Studies
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
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发文量
10
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