Eat me : an un/(re)-materializing the material on the stage---a study of the cannibalistic nature of the theatre; or, There is (no) material: The text and the body are the same
Cannibalism in drama collapses the gap between the performative word and the performance of a text or body. It answers Antonin Artaud's call for a new kind of theatre. He calls this new kind of theatre one of Cruelty, i.e., one that shakes the audience out of passive state vis-à-vis bourgeois, Western, narrative-based theatre. Artaud pushes for a recodified theatrical language that does not depend upon language. His desire to circumvent spoken or written language, however, cannot occur, a fact he even acknowledges as a possibility in his The Theatre and Its Double. Cannibalism accounts for this inability by mediating the gap between performance and the performative. It reconstitutes the body and the spoken and/or written word in such a manner that the two are indistinguishable. Through a study of cannibalism in a selection of twentieth-century dramatic texts, this project suggests that a Theatre of Cannibalism might accomplish what Artaud is after, a life before birth, a consciousness before consciousness.
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- In Collections
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Electronic Theses & Dissertations
- Copyright Status
- In Copyright
- Material Type
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Theses
- Authors
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Bowman, Matthew Miles
- Thesis Advisors
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Roof, Judith
- Committee Members
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Cabanas, Miguel
Folino White, Ann
Larabee, Ann
- Date Published
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2012
- Subjects
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Artaud, Antonin
Theater
Cannibalism
- Program of Study
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Literature in English
- Degree Level
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Doctoral
- Language
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English
- Pages
- vi, 180 pages
- ISBN
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9781267847119
1267847115
- Permalink
- https://doi.org/doi:10.25335/jnkg-pe85