The Rhythm of Thinking: Immanence and Ethics in Theater Performance
Abstract
The dissertation The Rhythm of Thinking: Immanence and Ethics in Theater Performance is an artistic research project in the field of theater, with directing and theatrical composition and dramaturgy as its main points of focus. The critical exploration is based on the experience of conceptualizing and directing three different theater performances. The project is an attempt to explore the implications of the concept of immanence in the collective creative process of theater making. In particular, it is an effort to illuminate what might be called “processes of immanence” or “theater of immanence”. The research is built around a net of questions, observations, and thoughts ranging from the experiences of collective creative processes and collaborative work with the performers, to academic criticism on discourses related to the fields of performance studies, philosophy and performance philosophy, perception theory, and musicology. The unfurling of this net is intended to contribute to the ideas and theories surrounding the relationship between the structural specifics of theater – dramaturgically and compositionally – and the aspects of meaning and affect. This formulation encapsulates a number of sub-areas to which the investigation aims to contribute with problematizing insertions, areas broadly defined as: transforming theories into concrete compositional and processual measures; developing dramaturgical discourses beyond semantic language; problematizing a binary relation between composition/conceptualization and an intuitive, emotional creative force; discussing how to enhance a readiness for variation in the performers; problematizing hierarchical structures, both in regards to the hierarchy of expressions, as well as creative influence; mapping out a thought process for a directorial practice; and finally, searching for a possible reciprocity between compositional structures and ethics.
The investigated materials are theater performances but the critical treatment is mainly done through philosophical discourses, predominately represented by the French philosopher Gilles Deleuze (1925–1995), the Canadian philosopher Brian Massumi (b.1956), and the Italian/Australian philosopher Rosi Braidotti (b.1954).
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (in Fine Arts)
University
Göteborgs universitet. Konstnärliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Fine, Applied and Performing Arts
Institution
Academy of Music and Drama ; Högskolan för scen och musik
Disputation
Glashuset, Akademin Valand, Göteborg
Date of defence
2016-09-16
johankgpetri@gmail.com
Other description
The dissertation exists as a book and as a multimedia platform, accessible at: http://hdl.handle.net/2077/45808 Film screenings of three documented performances at Friday 16 September, 9.30, Bio Valand, Storgatan 43, Göteborg.
Date
2016-08-19Author
Petri, Johan
Keywords
artistic research
co-composition
collective processes
compositional structure
dramaturgy
ethics
hierarchy in collective creation
immanent collective creation
instant collective composition
multiplicity
music theater
performance philosophy
performative critique
process ontology
process philosophy
relation of non-relation
theater
theater directing
theatrical composition
Rosi Braidotti
John Cage
Gilles Deleuze
Brian Massumi
Mathias Spahlinger
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-982423-0-0 (printed edition)
978-91-982423-1-7 (digital edition)
Series/Report no.
ArtMonitor Doctoral Dissertation and Licentiate Theses
No 58
Language
eng