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Artaud and His Doubles (Theater: Theory/Text/Performance)

[DOC] Artaud and His Doubles (Theater: Theory/Text/Performance) by Kimberly Jannarone in Arts-Photography

Description

Maple Leaf Rag is a ragtime composed by Scott Joplin in 1899 and along with The Entertainer his most popular. One of his early compositions it became a model for ragtime compositions by subsequent composers. It has been recorded by many well-known artists and featured in among other places in the film The Public EnemySheet Music for Recorder accompanied by Piano arranged by Lars Christian Lundholm.- Instrumentation: Piano and Recorder- Level: Medium- Score Type: Score and 1 Part- Tempo: Varying- Genre: Ragtime- Composer: Scott Joplin- Year Composed: 1899- Pages (approximate): 10


#2394110 in eBooks 2012-06-26 2012-06-26File Name: B0100RB0W4


Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. This book is long overdue. Based on highly selective ...By TacitusThis book is long overdue. Based on highly selective readings (or non-readings) that perpetuate the myth of arts humanitarian mission. generations of the theater practitioners and scholars have hailed Artaud as a friend of the grossly oppressed and neurotically alienated. That. Jannarone shows. is the 1960s talking. She corrects this myopic perspective by putting Artaud back into historical context. demonstrating that he has far more affinities with totalitarian thinking that flourished in the early twentieth century. This confirms Artauds importance. needless to say. A welcome antidote to the cult of genius one normally encounters mdash; and. more generally. a well-written work of intellectual history.0 of 5 people found the following review helpful. a terribly charismatic personaBy G. WilczynskiAntonin Artaud: a terribly charismatic persona. whose real career started late. after his long journey through many avant-garde revolutions. continents and mental states. culminating in his long years suffering at hands of cruelly baffled doctors and equally mystified literary supporters.It is ironic that. in the state of physical starvation. at the climax of German dominion over Europe he should attempt to draw attention of AYoung Jacques Lacan. no less. sentenced him to silence: "il neacute;crira plus une ligne" (he wont write a single line anymore). Several years after his verdict Artauds constantly flowing writings were to gain some credit (with a literary honour of Prix Sainte-Beuve in 1947. shortly after his release from asylum).The prize. awarded awkwardly in essay category. rewarded his hallucinatory poem. mythology of Van Gogh as victim of collective voyeurism and consumerist perverting modern society. It was exactly the same crowds. running amok to die for nazi dystopian new order. who earlier "committed suicide" on Van Gogh with his own hands. He was to become the last one among ever recurring heroes in Artaudian pantheon: after Heliogabalus. an anarchist on the throne of Roman Empire in decadence. Lewis Monk (from a famously dark gothic fantasy).His close contacts with German cinema makers in the most expressionist times. his passion for ecstatically physical and extreme acting. aiming at shock and terror among audience. his apocalyptic views on dying Western World. with all hopes and highest admiration for dancers from Bali. Tarahumara tricksters and shamanic initiation - all seems to make him a perfect example of verartete Kunst. abhorred and often burnt by the Nazis.If we are to consider the premise of this book. namely that all Artaud stands for. his prophecy. foreseeing in 1933 that Western civilisation is doomed and may bring an end to the human culture as it was known then - with all the rage of impossibility to wake the masses from orwellian nightmare. and cruelty as a means of rebellion against the bourgeois establishment - that all that might be assimilable to nazi racist Arian supremacy. killing Jews. homosexuals and other less blessed ethnical fringes. we would have to acknowledge an equally sound opinion: that 3rd reichs leaders were dealing in performance arts. and the Fuuml;hrer was. above all. a mystic Antichrist. seeking revenge on the European culture. including the industrial revolution and liberal capitalism.He may finally have had identified himself with the Green Knight. beheaded and blindly leading his people to hell. but it was rather an excess of populist rhetoric. self- aggrandizing and sign of confusion of his penultimate day. not inspiration. orArtaud had an incandescent. flame-breathing appeal which seduced Susan Sontag. Gilles Deleuze. famous creator of laboratorium theatre Grotowski. Peter Brook and many others. Is it credible to posit. as our author. professor Kimberly seems to be doing. that no one had noticed before her this terrible political leaning of our tortured poet?5 of 9 people found the following review helpful. The voice of reasonBy Fred LewisBecause of his fiery language and tormented life. scholars and theater people have long mistaken the wacky (and certifiably insane) Artaud for some kind of visionary. Well. hes not Jesus. In fact. as Jannarone shows in the first historicizing book on this seminal figure that I know of. hes a child of his times - which includes people like Mussolini and Hitler. Charismatic and talented. to be sure. but maybe wholly wrong about everything. With wit and charm. Jannarone takes on and overturns most of the received notions of Artaud scholarship. from French poststructuralists to Living-Theatre types in the U.S. A game-changer written in an accessible way with a minimum of the jargon that plagues so much academic writing.

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