Buch, Englisch, Band 147, 244 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
Reihe: Sinica Leidensia
Gao Xingjian's Theatre of the Tragic
Buch, Englisch, Band 147, 244 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 476 g
Reihe: Sinica Leidensia
ISBN: 978-90-04-42329-9
Verlag: Brill
In Dionysus on the Other Shore, Letizia Fusini argues that throughout his early exile years (late 1980s-1990s), Gao Xingjian gradually moved away from Absurdist Drama to develop a dramaturgical system with tragic characteristics. Drawing on a range of contemporary theories of tragedy, this book reconfigures some of the key tropes of Gao’s post-1987 theater as varied articulations of the Dionysian sparagmos mechanism. They are the dismemberment of the dramatic self, the usage of constricted spaces, the divisive nature of gender relations, and the agony of verbal language. Through a text-based analysis of seven plays, the author ultimately aims to show that in Gao’s theater, tragedy is an ongoing and mostly subtextual dynamism generated by an interplay of psychic forces concurrently cohesive and divisive.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Geisteswissenschaften Literaturwissenschaft Literaturen sonstiger Sprachräume Ost- & Südostasiatische Literatur
- Geisteswissenschaften Literaturwissenschaft Literaturwissenschaft: Dramen und Dramatiker
- Geisteswissenschaften Theater- und Filmwissenschaft | Andere Darstellende Künste Theaterwissenschaft
Weitere Infos & Material
Acknowledgements
Introduction: A Dramaturgical System with Tragic Characteristics: Rethinking Gao Xingjian’s Post-Exile Plays
1 Gao Xingjian and the Question of Culture
2 “A New Form of the Tragic Must and Will Be Born”: Gao Xingjian’s “Tragic Plays of Self”
3 A Theatre of the Tragic: Methodological Considerations
4 Dionysus on the Other Shore
1 From Oedipus to Dionysus: the Gaoian Tragic Self from Philosophy to Dramaturgy
1 Introduction: Tragedy and the Tragic—an Inextricable Dyad
2 Gao Xingjian, Tragedy, and the Tragic Condition
3 Modern Man’s Predicament: Subjectivity as Un-safe Haven
4 The Daimon Within: When Oedipus Is Not Enough
5 From Philosophy to Dramaturgy: the Tragic Mode
6 Bonds and Boundaries: the Gaoian Self as a Tragic Field
2 Toward a Theatre of the Tragic: The Bus Stop, The Other Shore, and the Transition from Absurdity to Tragedy
1 Introduction: Gao Xingjian’s (Tragic) Modernism: From the Homeland to Existence
2 The Bus Stop: Absurd or Pre-tragic?
3 Beyond Absurdist Drama: The Tragic Field as a Performative Device
4 Performing the Tragic Field: The Other Shore
5 From a Theatre of the Absurd to a Theatre of the Tragic
3 Between Cohesion and Division: the Tragic Field and Mode in Gao Xingjian’s Post-1990 Plays of Self
1 Introduction: Like “a Rip in the Paper Sky,” a Universe on the Edge of Chaos
2 Between Life and Death: the Spatialization of the Tragic Field and Sparagmos of the Feminine Self
3 The Sleepwalker: the Psychologization of the Tragic Field and the Sparagmos of the Masculine Self
4 Dialogue and Rebuttal: the Gendering of the Tragic Field and the Sparagmos of Language
5 The Death Collector: Dionysian Frenzy and the Apotheosis of the Tragic Potential
6 Mysterium Tremendum: Tragic Acting, Katabasis and the Religion of the Self
4 Escape and Modern Tragedy
1 Introduction: Gao Xingjian, Escape, and Cross-cultural Tragic Modernities
2 Escape: a Modern Tragedy?
3 Tragedy and Its Double(s): Reassembling the Fragments of Dionysus
Conclusion: Gao Xingjian’s Theatre of the Tragic as Thirdspace: towards a Transcultural Model?
Bibliography
Index