The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre
Due to the nature of live theatre, drama has persistently been used to explore postmodernist concerns throughout the years, since the inevitable boundary blurring in theatrical performances makes drama the perfect medium to examine such concerns. According to Brian McHale, “insofar as postmodernist...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-878782020-09-27T20:11:00Z The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre Ng, Carmen Siang Nan. Daniel Keith Jernigan School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English Due to the nature of live theatre, drama has persistently been used to explore postmodernist concerns throughout the years, since the inevitable boundary blurring in theatrical performances makes drama the perfect medium to examine such concerns. According to Brian McHale, “insofar as postmodernist fiction foregrounds ontological themes and ontological structure [...] it is always about death,” drawing a tight link between postmodernism, death, and drama. The postmodern preoccupation with death, then, becomes an interesting phenomenon to investigate when it is examined through drama performances, especially when death is portrayed in ways besides the conventional. Using three plays from three distinct periods, Molière’s The Hypochondriac, Luigi Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author and Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, this paper will attempt to show how these plays are, first and foremost, concerned with postmodernist themes, especially in the case of Molière, a French Neo-Classical play that is, on first look, anti-postmodern. After that, this paper will also analyze the ways death is portrayed in each play, showing how the staging of death is used to exemplify the breaking down of ontological boundaries. Keeping in mind McHale’s assertion that [p]ostmodernist writing enables us to experiment with imagining our own deaths, to rehearse our own deaths,” this paper proposes that, although theatre is used in attempts to experiment with the notion of death, it still potentially fails to capture death successfully. Bachelor of Arts in English 2013-04-08T03:08:36Z 2019-12-06T16:51:16Z 2013-04-08T03:08:36Z 2019-12-06T16:51:16Z 2012 2012 Final Year Project (FYP) Ng. C. S. N. (2012). The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre. Final year project report, Nanyang Technological University. https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87878 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9456 en Nanyang Technological University 36 p. application/pdf |
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DRNTU::Humanities::Literature::English Ng, Carmen Siang Nan. The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
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Due to the nature of live theatre, drama has persistently been used to explore postmodernist concerns throughout the years, since the inevitable boundary blurring in theatrical performances makes drama the perfect medium to examine such concerns. According to Brian McHale, “insofar as postmodernist fiction foregrounds ontological themes and ontological structure [...] it is always about death,” drawing a tight link between postmodernism, death, and drama. The postmodern preoccupation with death, then, becomes an interesting phenomenon to investigate when it is examined through drama performances, especially when death is portrayed in ways besides the conventional. Using three plays from three distinct periods, Molière’s The Hypochondriac, Luigi Pirandello’s Six Characters in Search of an Author and Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead, this paper will attempt to show how these plays are, first and foremost, concerned with postmodernist themes, especially in the case of Molière, a French Neo-Classical play that is, on first look, anti-postmodern. After that, this paper will also analyze the ways death is portrayed in each play, showing how the staging of death is used to exemplify the breaking down of ontological boundaries. Keeping in mind McHale’s assertion that [p]ostmodernist writing enables us to experiment with imagining our own deaths, to rehearse our own deaths,” this paper proposes that, although theatre is used in attempts to experiment with the notion of death, it still potentially fails to capture death successfully. |
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Daniel Keith Jernigan |
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Daniel Keith Jernigan Ng, Carmen Siang Nan. |
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Final Year Project |
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Ng, Carmen Siang Nan. |
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Ng, Carmen Siang Nan. |
title |
The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
title_short |
The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
title_full |
The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
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The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
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The theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
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theatrics of 'not-being' : rehearsing death in postmodern theatre |
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2013 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/87878 http://hdl.handle.net/10220/9456 |
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1681056900461887488 |