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This collection explores the growing global recognition of creativity and the arts as vital to social movements and change. Bringing together diverse perspectives from leading academics and practitioners who investigate how creative activism is deployed, taught, and critically analysed, it delineates the key parameters of this emerging field.
This book refers to the artistic deviation from dominant goals in a social system or from means considered legitimate in that system. This book explores a "New Humanism" in the performing arts, unique in the sense of human's ability to co-create and communicate beyond spatial and temporal boundaries, wars, and pandemics, through artistic deviations carried out by machines and through the Extended Reality. Through the lens of anthropology and aesthetics, this study selects useful case studies to demonstrate this phenomenon of performative symphonises, in which the experimentation of AI-driven creativity and the new human-robot interaction (HRI) lead to philosophical inquiries about the nature of creativity, intelligence, and the definition of art itself. These shifts in paradigms invite us to reconsider established concepts and explore new perspectives on the relationship between technology, art, and the human experience. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars in theatre and performance studies, anthropology, and digital humanities.
This insightful book explores the relationship between theater and digital culture. The authors show that the marriage of traditional performance with new technologies leads to an upheaval of the implicit “live” quality of theatre by introducing media interfaces and Internet protocols, all the while blurring the barriers between theater-makers and their audience.
This volume is a response to the growing need for new methodological approaches to the rapidly changing landscape of new forms of performative practices. The authors address a host of contemporary phenomena situated at the crossroads between science and fiction which employ various media and merge live participation with mediated hybrid experiences at both affective and cognitive level. All essays collected here move across disciplinary divisions in order to provide an account of these new tendencies, thus providing food for thought for a wide readership ranging from performative studies to the social sciences, philosophy and cultural studies.
This Element argues for the importance of extended reality as an innovative force that changes the understanding of theatre and Shakespeare. It shows how the inclusion of augmented and virtual realities in performance can reconfigure the senses of the experiencers, enabling them to engage with technology actively. Such engagements can, in turn, result in new forms of presence, embodiment, eventfulness, and interaction. In drawing on Shakespeare's dramas as source material, this Element recognises the growing practice of staging them in an extended reality mode, and their potential to advance the development of extended reality. Given Shakespeare's emphasis on metatheatre, his works can inspire the layering of environments and the experiences of transition between the environments both features that distinguish extended reality. The author's examination of selected works in this Element unveils creative convergences between Shakespeare's dramaturgy and digital technology.
L’expression usuelle «aller voir un spectacle de théâtre» semble désormais inadéquate lorsqu’il s’agit de décrire l’activité d’un spectateur au XXIe siècle. Les formes théâtrales de l’ère numérique testent en effet une multitude de configurations inédites intégrant les nouvelles technologies, et bousculent de fait la définition même du spectateur. Filmé par les caméras de Jay Scheib, de Cyril Teste ou de Gob Squad, celui-ci se découvre sur écran et réagit avec son corps; il déambule avec des écouteurs dans les formes scéniques de Rimini Protokoll et d’INVIVO, tout autant qu’il expérimente les visiocasques dans les spectacles de CREW et de RGB Project...
Ce livre répond à une question majeure et manifeste une urgence. Les théories généralistes sur le brassage des cultures, le prétendu « choc des civilisations », la mondialisation – la « globalisation » déclamées par les nouveaux empires économiques et politiques ne parlent que du saisissable– o preensivel -, l'immédiat compréhensible, objets de consommation.
L'invention d'un homme « augment頻, infiniment dopé par les prouesses numériques et les biotechnologies, est à nos portes : voulons-nous de ce monde que le posthumanisme nous promet ?
« À notre époque, les nouvelles technologies contribuent largement à l'évolution des langages scéniques modifiant profondément les conditions de représentation et intensifi ant toujours davantage les effets de présence et les effets de réel. Ces technologies sont souvent liées à l'émergence de nouvelles formes scéniques qui transgressent les limites des disciplines et se caractérisent par des spectacles à l'identité instable, mouvante, en perpétuelle redéfinition. »--
Performance in the Twenty-First Century: Theatres of Engagement addresses the reshaping of theatre and performance after postmodernism. Andy Lavender argues provocatively that after the ‘classic’ postmodern tropes of detachment, irony, and contingency, performance in the twenty-first century engages more overtly with meaning, politics and society. It involves a newly pronounced form of personal experience, often implicating the body and/or one’s sense of self. This volume examines a range of performance events, including work by both emergent and internationally significant companies and artists such as Rimini Protokoll, Blast Theory, dreamthinkspeak, Zecora Ura, Punchdrunk, Ontroerend Goed, Kris Verdonck, Dries Verhoeven, Rabih Mroué, Derren Brown and David Blaine. It also considers a wider range of cultural phenomena such as online social networking, sports events, installations, games-based work and theme parks, where principles of performance are in play. Performance in the Twenty-First Century is a compelling and provocative resource for anybody interested in discovering how performance theory can be applied to cutting-edge culture, and indeed the world around them.