Welcome to
Performance Philosophy
Performance Philosophy is an international network open to all researchers concerned with the relationship between performance & philosophy.
Started by aha. Last reply by aha May 11, 2020. 2 Replies 0 Likes
Hi.Hopefully all is well!The shorty is a suggestion to start an online conversation group to elaborate questions from theCovid-19 oriented period and Performance Philosophy?eg. Intra-Active Virome?…Continue
Started by Egemen Kalyon Apr 2, 2020. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Hello, "We all have the same dream" is my project that aims to create an archive from the dreams of our era and reinterpret Jung's "collective unconscious" concepts with performance and performing…Continue
Started by Ante Ursic Mar 15, 2020. 0 Replies 0 Likes
Circus and its Others 2020November 12-15University of California, DavisRevised Proposal Deadline: April 15, 2020Launched in 2014, the Circus and its Others research project explores the ways in which…Continue
Tags: critical, ethnic, queer, performance, animal
Posted by Anirban Kumar on May 13, 2020 at 14:27 0 Comments 0 Likes
Posted by Phillip Cartwright on January 15, 2020 at 21:28 0 Comments 0 Likes
Karolina Nevoina and I are pleased to announce availability of our working paper, "Further Evidence on the Meaning of Musical Performance". Special thanks to Professor Aaron Williamon and the Royal College of Music, Centre for Performance Science.…
ContinuePosted by Carlos Eduardo Sanabria on December 6, 2019 at 20:01 0 Comments 0 Likes
Posted by Gabrielle Senza on February 23, 2018 at 0:36 0 Comments 1 Like
I just came across Denis Beaubois, an Australian multidisciplinary artist whose work, Currency - Division of Labor might be of interest to researchers here.
It is a series of video/performance works that use the division of labor model in capitalism as a structural tool for performance.
From his website:
The Division of labour work explores…
Continue'Theatre was born out of a universal, irresistible attraction to the new and extraordinary, a desire to feel oneself put into a state of passion'.
(Friedrich Schiller).
Can our attraction to the "new" and the "extraordinary", at times somehow push the limitations of what is considered socially and politically acceptable moral behaviour? By identifying the theatre as a moral institution, are we also simultaneously giving rise to an immorality within the theatre event?
Debatably, much of contemporary British and European theatre is framed in such a way to cause provocation or tension with its spectators.
What deeply concerns me here is this relationality between the spectator and the event (theatre institution/ company, on a wider scale); if theatre can cause provocation to the extent of an animated reaction from its spectators, I'm interested in how this may alter the role of the theatre within wider society. What does this form of dislocation and disruption bring about that consensus and communicative work cannot?
After looking closely at this website and its, needless to say, inter-disciplinarian approach of performance and philosophy; I was slightly shocked that I could find little or no direct ties to Morality or Moral theory. This might be due to the extremely large nature of the discourse, and its seemingly never-ending ties to the wider world. By opening up this discussion, I am hoping to trouble/test the waters of the relationship between the (moral) theatre institution and human morality.
To begin to chip away at this large discourse I propose some initial questions:
I would really like to hear your thoughts on the concerns that I have raised here especially concerning the matter of whether you think human morality has some grounded weight to be expressed in the Performance Philosophy domain.
Thanks,
Matt Hood
Tags:
You know, its an interesting point, this connection between the idea of the "new" and provocation. Because they are connected to very interesting aspects in a globalized society. They are also, interestingly enough, pulled in two different directions by two philosophers I'm getting to know who are both very 'moral' in their own way. I am thinking of Adorno and Levinas at the moment.
Adorno, to me at least, is interesting in this point because of his resistance of what you might call the "cult of the novel", which he identifies as a strand of enlightenment thought, which, caused by a kind of primordial fear of slipping back into primitivism, dominates nature. This includes, eventually, the domination of other humans by those in power. If you like, provocation, or causing deliberate discomfort in order to directly cause an effect in the spectator could be seen as another form of domination. This does not, however, get into what is always acceptable to show on stage or not. If shock and provocation is another form of domination, then it is only so when it does what it intends, which to my mind is a fairly rare occurrence.
On the flipside, its also interesting to look at these proliferating forms, especially ones that attempt to introduce the spectator to a broader way of viewing the world, through the lens of the ethical that Simon Critchley teases out from Levinas in his book The Ethics of Deconstruction. His essential claim is that "being is exteriority", that the ethical occurs in connection to the encounter with the "other." The other is that which cannot, or should not be subsumed into the "same" of our everyday lives. The other demands something of us, that we re-evaluate our lives in the face of something that we cannot conquer, or bring into the same. The interesting thing is, a lot of contemporary theories of art hinge around a similar ethical assumption. Many companies (the one I am a part of included) seek to uncover the covered, to present their audience something which is "other" and thus cause a re-orientation of their perceptual spheres.
Personally, I think this just ends up being kind of reductive. It is also a different form of a theatre that would attempt to perform a morally didactic play for the audience's benefit, albeit much more varied and exciting. Adorno also gives grounds to question whether a production can be entirely moral, or, on the other hand, entirely based on form. As for me, despite many of my collaborator's objections, I tend to shy away from being overtly moral or political. Yes, every play is in some way connected to both, but you don't necessarily have to highlight it. I do think that the theatre can function (though more so in contemporary europe) as a kind of moral institution, but it is one that must be careful of using force, on all sides. Even now I hesitate to use the word moral, because it tends to imply in contemporary philosophy a strict set of morals which are supposed to be universal. That's a very difficult position to maintain. But anyhow, I think that to perform for an audience, you have to think beyond presenting a message, shocking, or even, say in a humanist theatre, showing work that upholds human dignity. There is, if you like, more than one thread in the tapestry.
But, then again, these are merely my personal aesthetics.
Have you read Tzachi Zamir's essay "Unethical Acts"(The Philosophical Quarterly Vol. 63, No. 251 April 2013)? The essay would seem quite relevant to your concerns.
Daniel W. Christmann -
Where can I find this discussion in Adorno?
Daniel W. Christmann said:
You know, its an interesting point, this connection between the idea of the "new" and provocation. Because they are connected to very interesting aspects in a globalized society. They are also, interestingly enough, pulled in two different directions by two philosophers I'm getting to know who are both very 'moral' in their own way. I am thinking of Adorno and Levinas at the moment.
Adorno, to me at least, is interesting in this point because of his resistance of what you might call the "cult of the novel", which he identifies as a strand of enlightenment thought, which, caused by a kind of primordial fear of slipping back into primitivism, dominates nature. This includes, eventually, the domination of other humans by those in power. If you like, provocation, or causing deliberate discomfort in order to directly cause an effect in the spectator could be seen as another form of domination. This does not, however, get into what is always acceptable to show on stage or not. If shock and provocation is another form of domination, then it is only so when it does what it intends, which to my mind is a fairly rare occurrence.
On the flipside, its also interesting to look at these proliferating forms, especially ones that attempt to introduce the spectator to a broader way of viewing the world, through the lens of the ethical that Simon Critchley teases out from Levinas in his book The Ethics of Deconstruction. His essential claim is that "being is exteriority", that the ethical occurs in connection to the encounter with the "other." The other is that which cannot, or should not be subsumed into the "same" of our everyday lives. The other demands something of us, that we re-evaluate our lives in the face of something that we cannot conquer, or bring into the same. The interesting thing is, a lot of contemporary theories of art hinge around a similar ethical assumption. Many companies (the one I am a part of included) seek to uncover the covered, to present their audience something which is "other" and thus cause a re-orientation of their perceptual spheres.
Personally, I think this just ends up being kind of reductive. It is also a different form of a theatre that would attempt to perform a morally didactic play for the audience's benefit, albeit much more varied and exciting. Adorno also gives grounds to question whether a production can be entirely moral, or, on the other hand, entirely based on form. As for me, despite many of my collaborator's objections, I tend to shy away from being overtly moral or political. Yes, every play is in some way connected to both, but you don't necessarily have to highlight it. I do think that the theatre can function (though more so in contemporary europe) as a kind of moral institution, but it is one that must be careful of using force, on all sides. Even now I hesitate to use the word moral, because it tends to imply in contemporary philosophy a strict set of morals which are supposed to be universal. That's a very difficult position to maintain. But anyhow, I think that to perform for an audience, you have to think beyond presenting a message, shocking, or even, say in a humanist theatre, showing work that upholds human dignity. There is, if you like, more than one thread in the tapestry.
But, then again, these are merely my personal aesthetics.
What is given as my reply above is simply the duplication of a letter by Daniel Christmann. I clicked innocently on the word Reply and found David's letter reproduced with the note underneath saying 'you have 15 minutes to edit this.I had considerable trouble eliminating his letter and then took some trouble to explore my ideas on this subject. My 15 minutes must have run out and my letter was eliminated. I couldn't start all over again but may have another try when I have recovered my energy. I think I know better now what to do. Adorno says of philosophy - I will cal it thought as I'm not a fully-fledged philosopher - that it it tests itself on things with a certain spontaneity of reactions. This may be why even a few thoughts and even seemingly facile ones are something of a concentrated effort in me.
© 2024 Created by Laura Cull. Powered by