The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>

I first encountered Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida (1980) in 2012 when I was developing a performance on falling and photography. Since then I have re-encountered Barthes’s book annually as part of my practice-as-research PhD project on the relationships between performance and photography. This res...

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Main Author: Harry Robert Wilson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Performance Philosophy 2017-06-01
Series:Performance Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/126
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spelling doaj-14e0184da79f4a038d9941f0e0e201502020-11-24T21:10:49ZengPerformance PhilosophyPerformance Philosophy2057-71762017-06-013126628410.21476/PP.2017.3112669The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>Harry Robert Wilson0University of GlasgowI first encountered Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida (1980) in 2012 when I was developing a performance on falling and photography. Since then I have re-encountered Barthes’s book annually as part of my practice-as-research PhD project on the relationships between performance and photography. This research project seeks to make performance work in response to Barthes’s book – to practice with Barthes in an exploration of theatricality, materiality and affect. This photo-essay weaves critical discourse with performance documentation to explore my relationship to Barthes’s book. Responding to Michael Fried’s claim that Barthes’s Camera Lucida is an exercise in “antitheatrical critical thought” (Fried 2008, 98) the essay seeks to re-view debates on theatricality and anti-theatricality in and around Camera Lucida. Specifically, by exploring Barthes’s conceptualisation of the pose I discuss how performance practice might re-theatricalise the punctum and challenge a supposed antitheatricalism in Barthes’s text. Additionally, I argue for Barthes’s book as an example of philosophy as performance and for my own work as an instance of performance philosophy.https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/126roland barthescamera lucidaperformancetheatricalitypractice-as-research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Harry Robert Wilson
spellingShingle Harry Robert Wilson
The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
Performance Philosophy
roland barthes
camera lucida
performance
theatricality
practice-as-research
author_facet Harry Robert Wilson
author_sort Harry Robert Wilson
title The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
title_short The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
title_full The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
title_fullStr The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
title_full_unstemmed The Theatricality of the <i>Punctum</i>: Re-Viewing <i>Camera Lucida</i>
title_sort theatricality of the <i>punctum</i>: re-viewing <i>camera lucida</i>
publisher Performance Philosophy
series Performance Philosophy
issn 2057-7176
publishDate 2017-06-01
description I first encountered Roland Barthes’s Camera Lucida (1980) in 2012 when I was developing a performance on falling and photography. Since then I have re-encountered Barthes’s book annually as part of my practice-as-research PhD project on the relationships between performance and photography. This research project seeks to make performance work in response to Barthes’s book – to practice with Barthes in an exploration of theatricality, materiality and affect. This photo-essay weaves critical discourse with performance documentation to explore my relationship to Barthes’s book. Responding to Michael Fried’s claim that Barthes’s Camera Lucida is an exercise in “antitheatrical critical thought” (Fried 2008, 98) the essay seeks to re-view debates on theatricality and anti-theatricality in and around Camera Lucida. Specifically, by exploring Barthes’s conceptualisation of the pose I discuss how performance practice might re-theatricalise the punctum and challenge a supposed antitheatricalism in Barthes’s text. Additionally, I argue for Barthes’s book as an example of philosophy as performance and for my own work as an instance of performance philosophy.
topic roland barthes
camera lucida
performance
theatricality
practice-as-research
url https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/126
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