« They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne

Standardly, British verbatim theatre is perceived as the art of reconstruction par excellence. Indeed, everything we see and hear on stage is as it was, within the means of the theatre, that is. At a deeper level, regardless of whether a given contemporary verbatim artist chooses or not to adhere to...

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Main Author: Cyrielle Garson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée 2018-03-01
Series:Études Britanniques Contemporaines
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/4372
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spelling doaj-4228d526a66140239166fd112650f9d12020-11-25T00:32:06ZengPresses Universitaires de la MéditerranéeÉtudes Britanniques Contemporaines1168-49172271-54442018-03-015410.4000/ebc.4372« They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-BretagneCyrielle GarsonStandardly, British verbatim theatre is perceived as the art of reconstruction par excellence. Indeed, everything we see and hear on stage is as it was, within the means of the theatre, that is. At a deeper level, regardless of whether a given contemporary verbatim artist chooses or not to adhere to the outlined principle, it would seem that this type of theatre relentlessly pursues an impossible feat ‘trapped between the rock of pre-modernist fundamentalism and the hard place of postmodernist neo-liberalism’ (Tomlin 356). As Linden Wilkinson argues, verbatim theatre is ‘not concerned with reconstructing the known world’ (132), and yet it is my contention that it engages with what we may call a ‘reconstructionist’ project, one that is perhaps capable of changing the current focus and purpose of the discussion around theatre and performance. In other words, there is an irresistible paradox at the core of these practices, surrounding the notion of ‘reconstruction’, that this paper will endeavour to address. Drawing from recent examples of British verbatim theatre, it will be argued that the notion of reconstruction at work in verbatim performance is multifaceted, reimagining its discourse in an increasingly skeptical age. It will therefore be necessary to propose a typology of the different kinds of reconstruction that permeate these works, before attempting to articulate their social, aesthetic and political implications.http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/4372aestheticsauthenticityBritaincontemporaryparadoxpolitical implications
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cyrielle Garson
spellingShingle Cyrielle Garson
« They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
Études Britanniques Contemporaines
aesthetics
authenticity
Britain
contemporary
paradox
political implications
author_facet Cyrielle Garson
author_sort Cyrielle Garson
title « They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
title_short « They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
title_full « They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
title_fullStr « They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
title_full_unstemmed « They tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : Pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en Grande-Bretagne
title_sort « they tell you it’s authentic but it’s not » : pour une approche « reconstructionniste » du théâtre verbatim contemporain en grande-bretagne
publisher Presses Universitaires de la Méditerranée
series Études Britanniques Contemporaines
issn 1168-4917
2271-5444
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Standardly, British verbatim theatre is perceived as the art of reconstruction par excellence. Indeed, everything we see and hear on stage is as it was, within the means of the theatre, that is. At a deeper level, regardless of whether a given contemporary verbatim artist chooses or not to adhere to the outlined principle, it would seem that this type of theatre relentlessly pursues an impossible feat ‘trapped between the rock of pre-modernist fundamentalism and the hard place of postmodernist neo-liberalism’ (Tomlin 356). As Linden Wilkinson argues, verbatim theatre is ‘not concerned with reconstructing the known world’ (132), and yet it is my contention that it engages with what we may call a ‘reconstructionist’ project, one that is perhaps capable of changing the current focus and purpose of the discussion around theatre and performance. In other words, there is an irresistible paradox at the core of these practices, surrounding the notion of ‘reconstruction’, that this paper will endeavour to address. Drawing from recent examples of British verbatim theatre, it will be argued that the notion of reconstruction at work in verbatim performance is multifaceted, reimagining its discourse in an increasingly skeptical age. It will therefore be necessary to propose a typology of the different kinds of reconstruction that permeate these works, before attempting to articulate their social, aesthetic and political implications.
topic aesthetics
authenticity
Britain
contemporary
paradox
political implications
url http://journals.openedition.org/ebc/4372
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