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Drama and Theatre DRAMA ◄► First person narrative◄► NARRATIVE acting, dramatic monologue telling, showing reporting presenting autobiography representing addresseraddress addressee 'I/we-you' ‘s/he, they, it' mimesis diegesis Drama from Greek draein meaing to do, to act, means a kind of acting two meanings: playing roles, performing an action Peripeteia – reversal of fortune Anagnorisis – recognition of unknown person or fact Theatre, from Greek thea (spectacle) and theon (spectator) requires a 'play space' for the show to go on division between actors and spectators sometimes boundaries blurred or deliberatly transgressed Displacing the Body Samuel Weber • • Aristotle, it is well known, stated that philosophical thinking originated in wonder or surprise, thaumazein. Although the remarks I have to offer today are far too preliminary and tentative to make any claim at being philosophical, they do originate in a sense of wonderment. In an age increasingly dominated by electronic media, a certain theatricality seems not only to survive, but even to reemerge with renewed force and transformed significance. From military or strategic thinking to the more rarefied realms of post-Hegelian philosophy, theatrical perspectives assume an importance that could be qualified as paradigmatic, if the notion of paradigmaticity were not itself called into question by the theatrical. For it seems as if the notion of theatricality emerges precisely in response to an uncertainty about the conditions under which anything can be exemplified or indicated, alongside something else (para-deiknúnai: to show side by side). And since there is no more time available, I will close by asserting simply that the digitality of the digital, which, as Negroponte as suggestively asserted, replaces »atoms« by »bits«, in an analogous manner points us towards the ever-present necessity of reconstituting those bits and pieces into some sort of body or reality, be it »virtual«. different types of staging: arena, in the round, thrust, proscenium arch (picture book, fourth-wall removed), Brechtian (all devices and stage hands open to view -- alienation effect, or Verfremdungseffekt ), studio and promenade Hans Belting, from Florence & Baghdad The secular theatre ofo the Renaissance developed a form of staging that had no equivalent in classical antiquity, and backdrops represented an even greater departure from the past. In their performances actors made no overt references to them, although sometimes children were placed in the background to link the perspective scene to the action of the play to increase its effect. The space used by the actors had no connection to the space depicted in the “prospect.” For a long time actors performed only on a narrow proscenium adjacent to the footlights, and the entire depth of the stage was reserved for the scena. Such a ceasura between audience and stage did not exist yet in the early days of the theatre. The boundary line tended to run, rather, between the site of the action and the backdrop, that is, within the stage itself, while the audience’s spatial relation to the perfomance space couldl vary. In England the “prospectives” of the Renaissance stage were first introduced a century later, when their vogue in Italy and France was almost over. Shakespeare, who called the stage “insubstantial” in The Tempest, still had little to do with the stage prospect. Ben Jonson and the architect Inigo Jones, however, quarreled over whether in masques, as some dramatic performances were called, the stage set (“the body”) or the text (“the soul”) should take priority. Jones was just as familiar with the new stage techniques as with the tradition of the Renaissance prospect...In Jonson’s Masque of Blackness spectators saw not scenery “dispersed around the stage” but rather “one indivisible scene where the action was set.” ... Perspective was something entirely new in the English theater. Marshal McLuhan - The Medium is the Message The personal and social consequences of any medium – that is, of any extension of ourselves – result from the new scale that is introduced into our affairs by each extension of ourselves, or by any new technology. (23) the “message” of any medium or technology is the change of scale or pace or pattern that it introduces into human affairs. (24) Erich Auerbach, Mimesis (on Antoine de la Sale) It is apparent that the late-feudal epideictic style is able to produce a visual representation of such a genuinely tragic and genuinely real scene...This is the more remarkable since in our case the place of the action is extremely everyday and domestic, the personages are a married couple, talking over their troubles at night in bed. In the classical conception of the ancients this is no proper setting for a tragic action in the elevated sense. Here the tragic, the grave, the probelmatic appears in the everyday life of a family. ... Despite the solemn and ceremonious language, what takes place is very simple and very naive. A few simple thoughts and emoitons appear, in harmony or in conflict. There is no question of any stylistic separation between the tragic and everyday realism. During its heyday, in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, French courtly literature produced nothing so real and “creatural” (Kreatürliches). So it is that the essence of mimesis is not imitation, but production... Lacoue-Labarthe, Philippe, Typography. 1975.