An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings

The article aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge and its connection to a new kind of acting. Mise en scène, that is, the collective and negotiable creation of meaning in theatre, will be at the core of the following pages. I will examine the eighteenth-century essayi...

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Main Author: Maria Grazia Dongu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Firenze University Press 2019-03-01
Series:Journal of Early Modern Studies
Online Access:https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-jems/article/view/7110
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spelling doaj-1edda723f867431eaec2cb8bd31581912020-11-25T03:24:40ZengFirenze University PressJournal of Early Modern Studies2279-71492019-03-01810.13128/JEMS-2279-7149-24888An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate MeaningsMaria Grazia Dongu0Laboratorio editoriale OA / Dip. LILSIThe article aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge and its connection to a new kind of acting. Mise en scène, that is, the collective and negotiable creation of meaning in theatre, will be at the core of the following pages. I will examine the eighteenth-century essayists who redefined the body as a readable text and senses as useful tools for understanding others, participants in the process. Metatexts, engendered by both the dramaturgic text and its staging, will demonstrate how these essayists orientated acting and theatrical reception. Key-words around which the main concepts have been developed will be considered as markers of the pervasiveness of the discourse on passions and sensibility in many literary and performative genres. As a case-study, the article focuses on Macbeth, affirming that essays written on the art of acting and related topics concurred in creating meaningful refractions in Garrick’s performances, whose manifold instances were disseminated by reviewers. The process of knowledge examined in essays was literally acted out in the theatrical space and commented in letters shedding light on Shakespeare’s text and its previous adaptations. However, the article’s focus can only be retrospective and highly influenced by contemporary pivotal studies on these topics. https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-jems/article/view/7110
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Grazia Dongu
spellingShingle Maria Grazia Dongu
An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
Journal of Early Modern Studies
author_facet Maria Grazia Dongu
author_sort Maria Grazia Dongu
title An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
title_short An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
title_full An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
title_fullStr An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
title_full_unstemmed An Eighteenth-Century <em>mise en scène</em> and the Play of Refractions: Essayists, Critics, Spectators, and an Actor Negotiate Meanings
title_sort eighteenth-century <em>mise en scène</em> and the play of refractions: essayists, critics, spectators, and an actor negotiate meanings
publisher Firenze University Press
series Journal of Early Modern Studies
issn 2279-7149
publishDate 2019-03-01
description The article aims to reconstruct the eighteenth-century discussion about knowledge and its connection to a new kind of acting. Mise en scène, that is, the collective and negotiable creation of meaning in theatre, will be at the core of the following pages. I will examine the eighteenth-century essayists who redefined the body as a readable text and senses as useful tools for understanding others, participants in the process. Metatexts, engendered by both the dramaturgic text and its staging, will demonstrate how these essayists orientated acting and theatrical reception. Key-words around which the main concepts have been developed will be considered as markers of the pervasiveness of the discourse on passions and sensibility in many literary and performative genres. As a case-study, the article focuses on Macbeth, affirming that essays written on the art of acting and related topics concurred in creating meaningful refractions in Garrick’s performances, whose manifold instances were disseminated by reviewers. The process of knowledge examined in essays was literally acted out in the theatrical space and commented in letters shedding light on Shakespeare’s text and its previous adaptations. However, the article’s focus can only be retrospective and highly influenced by contemporary pivotal studies on these topics.
url https://oajournals.fupress.net/index.php/bsfm-jems/article/view/7110
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