Book contents
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figure
- Notes on Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- A Note on Brecht in English
- Introduction
- Part I Brecht’s World
- Part II Brecht’s Work
- Chapter 13 The Work of the Theater
- Chapter 14 Brecht and Marxism
- Chapter 15 Brecht and Photography
- Chapter 16 Brecht and Film: Medium and Masses
- Chapter 17 Brecht and Fiction
- Chapter 18 Gestus in Context
- Chapter 19 Brecht’s Ethics
- Chapter 20 Brecht and Dialectics
- Chapter 21 Brecht and East Asia
- Chapter 22 Brecht’s Work with Musical Composers
- Part III The World’s Brecht
- Concise Bibliography
- Index
Chapter 21 - Brecht and East Asia
from Part II - Brecht’s Work
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2021
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Bertolt Brecht in Context
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figure
- Notes on Contributors
- Chronology
- Abbreviations
- Preface
- A Note on Brecht in English
- Introduction
- Part I Brecht’s World
- Part II Brecht’s Work
- Chapter 13 The Work of the Theater
- Chapter 14 Brecht and Marxism
- Chapter 15 Brecht and Photography
- Chapter 16 Brecht and Film: Medium and Masses
- Chapter 17 Brecht and Fiction
- Chapter 18 Gestus in Context
- Chapter 19 Brecht’s Ethics
- Chapter 20 Brecht and Dialectics
- Chapter 21 Brecht and East Asia
- Chapter 22 Brecht’s Work with Musical Composers
- Part III The World’s Brecht
- Concise Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Comparative cross-disciplinary study shows how East Asian thought, theater, and poetry, while situating cultural analogies, helpedshape Brecht’s work. The narrative clarity anddistancing techniques of Japanese theater undercut superficial naturalism, and comparison with sophisticated, graceful Chinese theater later relativized his own. In Chinese philosophy he encountered witty discrimination, an estranging critique of virtues, dialectical social interrelations, a stimulating flow of things, focus on practical engagement, warnings (apropos Confucius) of accommodation with power and, in his crucial Me-ti, what he intimated to Korsch as an “anti-systematic … epic science” realized through individual productivity, not by a top-down imposed social order. East Asian imagination stimulated an unconventional aesthetics. In ethics, the social paradox of self-love would avoid turning people into “the servants of priests.” Even another global politics once briefly seemed conceivable, when China appeared to confront European Stalinism, but in the end that revolution disappointed as well.
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- Bertolt Brecht in Context , pp. 182 - 190Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2021