Book contents
- The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science
- Cambridge Companions to Theatre and Performance
- The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Objectivity and Observation
- 2 Staging Consciousness
- 3 The Experimental/Experiential Stage
- 4 A Cave, a Skull, and a Little Piece of Grit
- 5 The Play at the End of the World
- 6 Bodies of Knowledge
- 7 Pathogenic Performativity
- 8 Theatres of Mental Health
- 9 Devised Theatre and the Performance of Science
- 10 Theatre and Science as Social Intervention
- 11 Acting and Science
- 12 Staging Cognition
- 13 Clouds and Meteors
- 14 ‘The Stage Hand’s Lament’
- Index
- References
13 - Clouds and Meteors
Recreating Wonder on the Early Modern Stage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2021
- The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science
- Cambridge Companions to Theatre and Performance
- The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Illustrations
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- 1 Objectivity and Observation
- 2 Staging Consciousness
- 3 The Experimental/Experiential Stage
- 4 A Cave, a Skull, and a Little Piece of Grit
- 5 The Play at the End of the World
- 6 Bodies of Knowledge
- 7 Pathogenic Performativity
- 8 Theatres of Mental Health
- 9 Devised Theatre and the Performance of Science
- 10 Theatre and Science as Social Intervention
- 11 Acting and Science
- 12 Staging Cognition
- 13 Clouds and Meteors
- 14 ‘The Stage Hand’s Lament’
- Index
- References
Summary
Chapter 13: This chapter traces the theatrum mundi (theatre as world) metaphor back to its technical and philosophical roots. By comparing iconographic sources from scientific texts with scenographic ones, the chapter follows the evolution of the notions of machine and wonder in the seventeenth century and argues that the material culture of theatre played an important role in the development of Cartesian physics and the new cosmology and, in particular, in the mechanization of the world picture. The chapter focuses on the relationship between Fontenelle, Descartes, and the engineer and architect Giacomo Torelli, whose scenography gained him the name of ‘the great sorcerer’. Paradoxically, it is by taking up Torelli’s design, combined with Descartes’s new definition of meteors, that Fontenelle manages to define a new type of ‘wonder’, scientific and no longer magical.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Science , pp. 188 - 202Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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