The art of theater [[electronic resource] /] / James R. Hamilton
| The art of theater [[electronic resource] /] / James R. Hamilton |
| Autore | Hamilton James R |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (244 p.) |
| Disciplina | 792.01 |
| Collana | New directions in aesthetics |
| Soggetto topico | Theater - Philosophy |
| Soggetto genere / forma | Electronic books. |
| ISBN |
1-281-06905-1
9786611069056 0-470-69087-9 0-470-76610-7 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Contents; Prologue; Part I:The Basics; 1 The Emergence of the Art of Theater:Background and History; 1.1 The backstory:1850s to 1950s; 1.2 The decisive in . uences:Brecht,Artaud,Grotowski; 1.3 The decisive years:1961 to 1985; 1.4 The final threads:absorption of new practices into the profession and the academy; 2 Theatrical Performance is an Independent Form of Art; 2.1 Theatrical performance as radically independent of literature; 2.2 Theatrical performance as a form of art; 3 Methods and Constraints; 3.1 Idealized cases that help focus on features needing analysis
3.2 Three general facts about theatrical performances and the constraints they impose on any successful account of theatrical performances4 Theatrical Enactment:The Guiding Intuitions; 4.1 Enactment:something spectators and performers do; 4.2 The crucial concept:"attending to another "; 4.3 What it is to "occasion " responses; 4.4 Audience responses:willing suspension of disbelief, acquired beliefs,or acquired abilities?; 4.5 Relativizing the account by narrowing its scope to narrative performances; Part II:The Independence of Theatrical Performance; 5 Basic Theatrical Understanding 5.1 Minimal general success conditions for basic theatrical understanding5.2 Physical and affective responses of audiences as non-discursive evidence of understanding; 5.3 The success conditions for basic theatrical understanding met by moment-to-moment apprehension of performances; 5.4 "Immediate objects," "developed objects," and "cogency "; 5.5 Objects of understanding having complex structures; 5.6 Generalizing beyond plays; 5.7 The problem of "cognitive uniformity "; 6 The Mechanics of Basic Theatrical Understanding 6.1 The "feature-salience " model of spectator convergence on the same characteristics6.2 What it is to respond to a feature as salient for some characteristics or a set of facts; 6.3 A thin common knowledge requirement; 6.4 A plausibly thickened common knowledge requirement; 6.5 The feature-salience model,"reader-response theory," and "intentionalism "; 6.6 Generalizing the salience mechanism to encompass non-narrative performances; 6.7 Some important benefits of the feature-salience model: double-focus,slippage,"performer power," "character power," and t 6.8 The feature-salience model and explaining how basic theatrical understanding occurs7 What Audiences See; 7.1 Identifying characters,events,and other objects in narrative performances; 7.2 Re-identification of characters and other objects in narrative performances; 7.3 The special nature of theatrical (uses of )space: performances and performance space; 7.4 Cross-performance re-identification; 7.5 Identifying and re-identifying objects in non-narrative performances; 7.6 Added benefits of the demonstrative and recognition- based approach to identification and re-identification 7.7 Theatrical performance as a fully independent practice |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9910145294103321 |
Hamilton James R
|
||
| Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||
The art of theater [[electronic resource] /] / James R. Hamilton
| The art of theater [[electronic resource] /] / James R. Hamilton |
| Autore | Hamilton James R |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (244 p.) |
| Disciplina | 792.01 |
| Collana | New directions in aesthetics |
| Soggetto topico | Theater - Philosophy |
| ISBN |
1-281-06905-1
9786611069056 0-470-69087-9 0-470-76610-7 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Contents; Prologue; Part I:The Basics; 1 The Emergence of the Art of Theater:Background and History; 1.1 The backstory:1850s to 1950s; 1.2 The decisive in . uences:Brecht,Artaud,Grotowski; 1.3 The decisive years:1961 to 1985; 1.4 The final threads:absorption of new practices into the profession and the academy; 2 Theatrical Performance is an Independent Form of Art; 2.1 Theatrical performance as radically independent of literature; 2.2 Theatrical performance as a form of art; 3 Methods and Constraints; 3.1 Idealized cases that help focus on features needing analysis
3.2 Three general facts about theatrical performances and the constraints they impose on any successful account of theatrical performances4 Theatrical Enactment:The Guiding Intuitions; 4.1 Enactment:something spectators and performers do; 4.2 The crucial concept:"attending to another "; 4.3 What it is to "occasion " responses; 4.4 Audience responses:willing suspension of disbelief, acquired beliefs,or acquired abilities?; 4.5 Relativizing the account by narrowing its scope to narrative performances; Part II:The Independence of Theatrical Performance; 5 Basic Theatrical Understanding 5.1 Minimal general success conditions for basic theatrical understanding5.2 Physical and affective responses of audiences as non-discursive evidence of understanding; 5.3 The success conditions for basic theatrical understanding met by moment-to-moment apprehension of performances; 5.4 "Immediate objects," "developed objects," and "cogency "; 5.5 Objects of understanding having complex structures; 5.6 Generalizing beyond plays; 5.7 The problem of "cognitive uniformity "; 6 The Mechanics of Basic Theatrical Understanding 6.1 The "feature-salience " model of spectator convergence on the same characteristics6.2 What it is to respond to a feature as salient for some characteristics or a set of facts; 6.3 A thin common knowledge requirement; 6.4 A plausibly thickened common knowledge requirement; 6.5 The feature-salience model,"reader-response theory," and "intentionalism "; 6.6 Generalizing the salience mechanism to encompass non-narrative performances; 6.7 Some important benefits of the feature-salience model: double-focus,slippage,"performer power," "character power," and t 6.8 The feature-salience model and explaining how basic theatrical understanding occurs7 What Audiences See; 7.1 Identifying characters,events,and other objects in narrative performances; 7.2 Re-identification of characters and other objects in narrative performances; 7.3 The special nature of theatrical (uses of )space: performances and performance space; 7.4 Cross-performance re-identification; 7.5 Identifying and re-identifying objects in non-narrative performances; 7.6 Added benefits of the demonstrative and recognition- based approach to identification and re-identification 7.7 Theatrical performance as a fully independent practice |
| Record Nr. | UNISA-996201833003316 |
Hamilton James R
|
||
| Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. di Salerno | ||
| ||
The art of theater / / James R. Hamilton
| The art of theater / / James R. Hamilton |
| Autore | Hamilton James R |
| Pubbl/distr/stampa | Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 |
| Descrizione fisica | 1 online resource (244 p.) |
| Disciplina | 792.01 |
| Collana | New directions in aesthetics |
| Soggetto topico | Theater - Philosophy |
| ISBN |
9786611069056
9781281069054 1281069051 9780470690871 0470690879 9780470766101 0470766107 |
| Formato | Materiale a stampa |
| Livello bibliografico | Monografia |
| Lingua di pubblicazione | eng |
| Nota di contenuto |
Contents; Prologue; Part I:The Basics; 1 The Emergence of the Art of Theater:Background and History; 1.1 The backstory:1850s to 1950s; 1.2 The decisive in . uences:Brecht,Artaud,Grotowski; 1.3 The decisive years:1961 to 1985; 1.4 The final threads:absorption of new practices into the profession and the academy; 2 Theatrical Performance is an Independent Form of Art; 2.1 Theatrical performance as radically independent of literature; 2.2 Theatrical performance as a form of art; 3 Methods and Constraints; 3.1 Idealized cases that help focus on features needing analysis
3.2 Three general facts about theatrical performances and the constraints they impose on any successful account of theatrical performances4 Theatrical Enactment:The Guiding Intuitions; 4.1 Enactment:something spectators and performers do; 4.2 The crucial concept:"attending to another "; 4.3 What it is to "occasion " responses; 4.4 Audience responses:willing suspension of disbelief, acquired beliefs,or acquired abilities?; 4.5 Relativizing the account by narrowing its scope to narrative performances; Part II:The Independence of Theatrical Performance; 5 Basic Theatrical Understanding 5.1 Minimal general success conditions for basic theatrical understanding5.2 Physical and affective responses of audiences as non-discursive evidence of understanding; 5.3 The success conditions for basic theatrical understanding met by moment-to-moment apprehension of performances; 5.4 "Immediate objects," "developed objects," and "cogency "; 5.5 Objects of understanding having complex structures; 5.6 Generalizing beyond plays; 5.7 The problem of "cognitive uniformity "; 6 The Mechanics of Basic Theatrical Understanding 6.1 The "feature-salience " model of spectator convergence on the same characteristics6.2 What it is to respond to a feature as salient for some characteristics or a set of facts; 6.3 A thin common knowledge requirement; 6.4 A plausibly thickened common knowledge requirement; 6.5 The feature-salience model,"reader-response theory," and "intentionalism "; 6.6 Generalizing the salience mechanism to encompass non-narrative performances; 6.7 Some important benefits of the feature-salience model: double-focus,slippage,"performer power," "character power," and t 6.8 The feature-salience model and explaining how basic theatrical understanding occurs7 What Audiences See; 7.1 Identifying characters,events,and other objects in narrative performances; 7.2 Re-identification of characters and other objects in narrative performances; 7.3 The special nature of theatrical (uses of )space: performances and performance space; 7.4 Cross-performance re-identification; 7.5 Identifying and re-identifying objects in non-narrative performances; 7.6 Added benefits of the demonstrative and recognition- based approach to identification and re-identification 7.7 Theatrical performance as a fully independent practice |
| Record Nr. | UNINA-9911019166503321 |
Hamilton James R
|
||
| Malden, MA ; ; Oxford, : Blackwell Pub., 2007 | ||
| Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II | ||
| ||