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Cultural performance in China beyond resistance in the 1990s /Noble, Jonathan Scott, January 2003 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Ohio State University, 2003. / Title from first page of PDF file. Document formatted into pages; contains x, 253 p. Includes bibliographical references (p. 235-253). Available online via OhioLINK's ETD Center
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You have to 'be there' : a Heideggerean phenomenology of humourMay, Shaun January 2013 (has links)
In this thesis, it is my intention to use Heideggerean phenomenology to build an account of two seemingly disparate areas of humour. Firstly, humour that arises out of a shift between ontological categories - specifically, between the ‘human’ and the ‘object,’ on one hand, and the ‘human’ and the ‘animal’ on the other; and, secondly, between objects and bodies failing. In doing so, I hope to elucidate the ‘hermeneutic condition’ of all humour, understood in Heidegger’s terms as the phenomenon of world. A hermeneutic condition is not to be thought of along the vein of a ‘necessary and sufficient condition’ of something being comical. There have been a number of attempts to try to pinpoint such a condition, with theories gravitating towards the ‘big three’ of incongruity, superiority and release. Personally, I am not convinced that there is such a condition - I think it more likely that certain types of humour share some traits, but there are no traits shared by all humour that can act as a marker that humour is afoot. Similarly, a hermeneutic condition should not be understood as a causal condition - I am not claiming that something is funny because of this condition. Rather, my suggestion is that the phenomenon of world is a necessary condition of humour’s intelligibility – we are the sort of creatures that can make and comprehend jokes because we are in-the-world, in Heidegger’s sense. I will suggest that it is only for Dasein that either getting the joke or failing to get the joke is a possibility, and this is precisely because only Dasein has this hermeneutic condition. Developing this claim necessitates the pursuit of a thoroughly worlded phenomenology, and to that end I want to suggest Heidegger’s work as an ideal foundation. Moreover, I will suggest that the humanlike objects and animals which amuse us are tacitly playing with this being-in-the-world, and the object and body failing has the potential to disclose this nature of this world to us. In this way, I hope to demonstrate that there is much to be gained from the phenomenological analysis of these two types of humour.
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The bhānd mode in Pakistani performancePamment, Claire January 2013 (has links)
Bhānds are wandering comedians, widely dispersed in Pakistan and North India. While their art constitutes a persistent mode of performed practice in Pakistan, it is not given recognition by dominant culture. The thesis explores the caste, class, ethnic and literary biases that motivate this ostracism, and in turn how bhānds play with these status distinctions in performance. This interaction creates a dynamic mode, which is able to expose, negotiate and subvert hegemonic power structures, and, in so doing, continually adapts itself to changing socio-cultural contexts. Appreciation of these practices and their effects on the social norm has hitherto been lacking, precisely because of the cultural marginalisation which attempts to place the bhānd within a fixed definition of identity. In order to redress this imbalance, I explicate the bhānd’s aesthetics and socio-cultural mediation through multiple contemporary and historical manifestations. Contemporary reinventions range from stand-up comics in the nuptial rites, to carnivalesque comedians of the popular Punjabi theatre and socio-political commentators on satellite television. By extracting the bhānd from the prejudices of historiography, the thesis explores historical lineages between the bhānd and Sanskrit jesters and Sufi wise fools, arguing that this Indo-Muslim synchronism perpetuates the bhānd's presence in South Asia. This re-reading aims conceptually to release the bhānd from contemporary and historical constraints as a shape-shifting mode, which may be seen to continue generating innovative forms and practices for theatre and performance in Pakistan today.
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From paper to performance: embodied ritualised actions towards self-transformationWarren, Zhane 05 September 2008 (has links)
Leora Farber Kim Berman
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De/Face: Performance and Painting in Chicanx Public ArtUnknown Date (has links)
archives@tulane.edu / 0 / Amy Crum
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My journey to an artist : I’m not a writer-- but I got a story to tellStephens, La Tasha René 25 October 2010 (has links)
This thesis tracks my journey as an artist as I developed personally and as my
performance piece moved from conception to implementation. The story begins with
what I understood to be a lack of material written for and about a specifically targeted
audience. The thesis goes on to discuss how that need could be met, how I could be the
catalyst for change and how that process could change my life forever. I have also
included my experience as a solo performer whose previous training had prepared me
only for collaboration with other actors. This thesis also discusses my process of creating
and developing I’m not a writer… but I got a story to tell and concludes with reflections
on my final performance. / text
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Performing mess: the generative potential of disorder in institutions of orderLubinsky, Talya 03 March 2016 (has links)
Beginning a research project at the Johannesburg City Library in 2013
was the catalyst for the body of work presented here for my Masters
dissertation. Since it had been closed for renovations, and reopened in
2012, the Library was filled with boxes of books waiting to be ordered
and put away, and old furniture piled up in empty rooms. There was a
tension between the structure of the library, an institution whose purpose
is to order and classify knowledge, and the state of its contents, which
were disorderly and messy.
This paradoxical relationship between mess and order is one which I
have mobilised in my practical work, and other case studies upon which
I have drawn. Through them, I argue that the tension between mess and
order can be a productive space for knowledge/artistic production.
I look at sites like the Johannesburg City Library as examples that present
a strategy for display that I have found to be useful in my practical work.
These strategies include presenting piles or heaps of papers, which
prompt the viewer to sort through, pick something up, or find something
amongst the ‘mess’.
I use the term ‘serendipity’ to describe the experience of ‘coming across’
something on one’s own. The serendipitous experience is one that gives
the discovered object an air of specialness, something that ‘I have found,
that therefore must have some special relationship to me’. A presentation
by Shireen Ally on her paper, Material Remains illustrates this point
through an anecdote she shared, about the neglected archives of the
administration of the former Bantustan, KwaNgane.
In my own work I mobilise the fragment as an important tool for freeing
text of being bound to one specific meaning. A text read as a singular
phrase, can adopt many meanings, often personal, in that they are
imagined by the viewer. By freeing text of its contextual ‘order’, one
opens possibility for another kind of serendipity, one that is formed
through the implication that a piece of text can relate to a viewer in a
very personal way.
I invoke the theory of performativity in relation to display strategies of
mess and fragmentation. A performative speech act is one that changes
the ontological status of the subject that is being implicated by the
speech act. Because fragmented pieces of text, displayed ‘messily’ do not
have prescribed categories (meanings), they enable the viewer to enact
his or her own meaning-making. Through this, the fragment comes
into being as part of the given category; the ontological status of that
phrase is changed through he act of categorising. This reminds us that
all categories are in fact constructed and are not inherent to the subject
of classification.
Here, the form of the Rolodex as a device that holds both my written
and practical research embodies the theory of performativity as it
allows for pages to be taken out and put back, can be read from any
point, facilitating non linearity and fragmentary text. Paradoxically, the
Rolodex also performs the function of an ordering mechanism.
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Performing mediaOsso, Tamara 13 February 2015 (has links)
A dissertation in fulfilment of the
Degree of Masters of Arts in Fine Arts (MAFA)
at the University of Witwatersrand
2014 / Catherine
Wood
describes
our
society
today
as
an
entanglement
between
languages,
time,
space,
intimacy,
drama
and
diversity
(Wood
2012:
10).
Ian
Chambers
affirms
that
the
notion
of
communicating
or
recounting
with
greater
multi-‐dimensionality,
enacting
or
displaying
more
than
one
perspective
at
the
same
time,
seems
to
better
facilitate
the
complexity
involved
in
communication
itself
(Chambers
2000:
25).
Interaction
in
today’s
context
is
therefore
a
complex
experience
that
can
position
many
modes
of
engagement
in
the
same
moment.
The
following
dissertation
explores
the
process
of
translating
more
than
one
visual
language
–
here,
painting
and
performance.
It
explores
how
the
interdisciplinary
nature
of
visual
languages
can
interpret
experience
as
multifaceted,
lending
greater
perspective
to
concepts,
issues
and
subject
matter.
Walter
Benjamin
suggests
that
this
is
only
possible
because
languages
“are
not
strangers
to
one
another,
but
are,
a
priori
and
apart
from
all
historical
relationships,
interrelated
in
what
they
want
to
express”
(Benjamin
1969:
72).
Benjamin’s
text
introduces
the
idea
of
translation
between
languages
as
a
mode,
a
natural
way
of
interaction.
I
will
use
his
concept
of
translation
to
explain
my
interest
in
the
conflation
between
painting
and
performance,
and
how
this
process
reflects
on
a
particular
experience
our
current
context.
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Elements of shamanism within performance artBabot, Philip January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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The passage of ZeppelinGarbowski, Lorilee S January 1982 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.V.S.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Architecture, 1982. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND ROTCH. / Includes bibliographical references. / by Lorilee S. Garbowski. / M.S.V.S.
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