Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of plates
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Introduction: theatre and theatre studies
- Part I ELEMENTS OF THEATRE
- Chapter 1 Performers and actors
- Chapter 2 Spectators and audiences
- Chapter 3 Spaces and places
- Part II SUBJECTS AND METHODS
- Part III THEATRE STUDIES BETWEEN DISCIPLINES
- Notes
- Bibliography and other resources
- Index
- The Cambridge Introductions to …
Chapter 3 - Spaces and places
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2015
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of plates
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Preface
- Introduction: theatre and theatre studies
- Part I ELEMENTS OF THEATRE
- Chapter 1 Performers and actors
- Chapter 2 Spectators and audiences
- Chapter 3 Spaces and places
- Part II SUBJECTS AND METHODS
- Part III THEATRE STUDIES BETWEEN DISCIPLINES
- Notes
- Bibliography and other resources
- Index
- The Cambridge Introductions to …
Summary
Given the centrality of space in the performance experience, it is perhaps somewhat surprising to find that critics do not have a precise, widely shared vocabulary to enable them to name and talk about the multiple dimensions of the way space functions in performance.
(Gay McAuley 1999)The Italian-style stage is the space of [a] lie: everything takes place in an interior which is surreptitiously opened, surprised, spied upon, savoured by a spectator hidden in the shadow.
(Roland Barthes 1972)Roland Barthes's characterization of Western theatre's dominant spatial configuration as deceitful and voyeuristic is both overstated and accurate at the same time. In the context of his discussion of Japanese Bunraku puppet theatre, the European proscenium does indeed seem to hide the spectator from the stage. Yet the ‘spectator hidden in the shadow’ is, historically speaking, a late development (dating from the late nineteenth century), and is therefore by no means inherent in the Italian-style stage. Barthes's comment does, however, point to a question of central interest to theatre studies, and that is the close relationship between stage forms and spectatorial attitudes. In this respect, this chapter is in part a continuation of the discussion of spectators and audiences begun in Chap. 2. It will, however, concentrate primarily on the physical conditions of performance, and outline ways in which the discipline of theatre studies has studied this problem.
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- The Cambridge Introduction to Theatre Studies , pp. 47 - 62Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008