POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THEATRE: THE EXPERIENCE OF AVANT-GARDE AND BLACK THEATRE
POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY OF THEATRE: THE EXPERIENCE OF AVANT-GARDE AND BLACK THEATRE
Author(s): Michael A. PetersSubject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts
Published by: Addleton Academic Publishers
Keywords: political; philosophy; avant-garde; black; theatre; poetry
Summary/Abstract: In this paper we argue there are three separate senses of the political in theatre – what we call in turn: (1) revolutionary content, a theatre that much in the style of Brecht or Lukacs seeks to represent the truth of class, gender or “race” relations; (2) experimental theatre, theatre that experiments with inventing new rules in the game and sometimes a new game; (3) metatheatricality – the vehicle whereby a play comments on itself, drawing attention to the circumstances of its own production, such as the presence of the audience or the fact that the actors are actors, and/or the making explicit of the literary artifice behind the production. In the first section we trace the relation between theatre and the European avant-garde beginning with the problem of realism in socialist art; in the second section we trace the development and preoccupations of Black theatre and its relation to political philosophy of theatre; and in the third and final section, we make some observations about the concept of metatheatricality.
Journal: Linguistic and Philosophical Investigations
- Issue Year: 2010
- Issue No: 9
- Page Range: 17-35
- Page Count: 19
- Language: English
- Content File-PDF