The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa
The staging of remembrance in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa invites us to see the stage as a space for evocation rather than representation. Building on the premise of the lieu de mémoire, as elucidated by historian Pierre Nora, this essay examines the ways in which Friel rewrites the theatrical...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1451232023-03-11T20:06:59Z The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa Lee, Cheryl Julia School of Humanities Humanities::Literature Brian Friel Irish Drama The staging of remembrance in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa invites us to see the stage as a space for evocation rather than representation. Building on the premise of the lieu de mémoire, as elucidated by historian Pierre Nora, this essay examines the ways in which Friel rewrites the theatrical vocabulary of Irish memory plays in order that he might bring memory out from under the dust of history. In Dancing at Lughnasa, Friel’s interplay of visibility and invisibility frees the stage mechanism from its common use of representation and makes of it a symbolic expression of human feeling. In particular, I propose that, contrary to most critics’ straightforward reading of the Mundys’ dance in Act 1 as one of Michael’s memories, it is in fact an aesthetic gesture located at the intersection of the past and present, of reality and the imagination, of the self and the other. An aesthetic gesture, unlike a dramatic action, depends on a sense of ongoing-ness, of a relationship being formed, and is a key strategy of a theatre of evocation. In the play, Friel establishes conditions that allow for emotional resonance in order that memory might be salvaged from being mere ruins of the past. Meaning-making is brought back into the present, as the formal accordance of significance to experience through emotion and empathy is established as the purpose of memory. Published version 2020-12-11T07:37:17Z 2020-12-11T07:37:17Z 2019 Journal Article Lee, C. J. (2019). The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa. Roundtable, 2(1), 2-. 2514-2070 https://roundtable.ac.uk/articles/abstract/43/ https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145123 1 2 en Roundtable © 2019 The Author(s) (published by University of Roehampton - Fincham Press). This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License. application/pdf |
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The staging of remembrance in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa invites us to see the stage as a space for evocation rather than representation. Building on the premise of the lieu de mémoire, as elucidated by historian Pierre Nora, this essay examines the ways in which Friel rewrites the theatrical vocabulary of Irish memory plays in order that he might bring memory out from under the dust of history. In Dancing at Lughnasa, Friel’s interplay of visibility and invisibility frees the stage mechanism from its common use of representation and makes of it a symbolic expression of human feeling. In particular, I propose that, contrary to most critics’ straightforward reading of the Mundys’ dance in Act 1 as one of Michael’s memories, it is in fact an aesthetic gesture located at the intersection of the past and present, of reality and the imagination, of the self and the other. An aesthetic gesture, unlike a dramatic action, depends on a sense of ongoing-ness, of a relationship being formed, and is a key strategy of a theatre of evocation. In the play, Friel establishes conditions that allow for emotional resonance in order that memory might be salvaged from being mere ruins of the past. Meaning-making is brought back into the present, as the formal accordance of significance to experience through emotion and empathy is established as the purpose of memory. |
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School of Humanities |
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School of Humanities Lee, Cheryl Julia |
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Lee, Cheryl Julia |
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Lee, Cheryl Julia |
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The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa |
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The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa |
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The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa |
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The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa |
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The redirected gesture in Brian Friel’s Dancing at Lughnasa |
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redirected gesture in brian friel’s dancing at lughnasa |
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2020 |
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https://roundtable.ac.uk/articles/abstract/43/ https://hdl.handle.net/10356/145123 |
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