Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field

As Marvin Carlson points out, the term performance has recently developed “as a central metaphor and critical tool for a bewildering variety of studies, covering almost every aspect of human activity.” While there is a tendency to stress their similarities and theoretical convergence, Per...

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Main Author: Deriu, Fabrizio
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de Alicante 2013-11-01
Series:Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
Online Access:https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2013-n26-performance-studies-floating-free-of-theatre-richard-schechner-and-the-rise-of-an-open-interdisciplinary-field
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spelling doaj-8e03fc88427342e0a4beb7cb676084022020-11-25T03:38:18ZengUniversidad de AlicanteRevista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses0214-48082171-861X2013-11-01261310.14198/raei.2013.26.024801Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary FieldDeriu, Fabrizio As Marvin Carlson points out, the term performance has recently developed “as a central metaphor and critical tool for a bewildering variety of studies, covering almost every aspect of human activity.” While there is a tendency to stress their similarities and theoretical convergence, Performance Studies and Cultural Studies have different origins: the roots of Performance Studies are clearly located in theatre studies and practices. The essay outlines a short history of the rise of Performance Studies, focussing on Richard Schechner’s work. According to him, a Performance Studies paradigm came to the fore in the mid-1950s, with books by Bateson, Austin, Goffman, Caillois and others. In the Sixties Schechner started to teach and was founder/director for influential theatre groups on the American avant-garde scene. When his interest shifted from theatre to performance and from aesthetics to social sciences, he found anthropology extremely useful because in ethnographies anthropologists treat the actual lived behaviours of people performatively. Schechner developed these assumptions and cooperated intensely with social scientists, in particular the anthropologist Victor Turner. In 1980 Schechner co-founded the Department of Performance Studies at NYU. Since then many academic institutions have started similar programs; Schechner’s books have been translated into many languages; and worldwide a growing cohort of scholars have been attracted to this stimulating, inter-disciplinary, threshold-crossing approach.https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2013-n26-performance-studies-floating-free-of-theatre-richard-schechner-and-the-rise-of-an-open-interdisciplinary-field
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Deriu, Fabrizio
spellingShingle Deriu, Fabrizio
Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
author_facet Deriu, Fabrizio
author_sort Deriu, Fabrizio
title Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
title_short Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
title_full Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
title_fullStr Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
title_full_unstemmed Performance Studies Floating Free of Theatre. Richard Schechner and the Rise of an Open Interdisciplinary Field
title_sort performance studies floating free of theatre. richard schechner and the rise of an open interdisciplinary field
publisher Universidad de Alicante
series Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
issn 0214-4808
2171-861X
publishDate 2013-11-01
description As Marvin Carlson points out, the term performance has recently developed “as a central metaphor and critical tool for a bewildering variety of studies, covering almost every aspect of human activity.” While there is a tendency to stress their similarities and theoretical convergence, Performance Studies and Cultural Studies have different origins: the roots of Performance Studies are clearly located in theatre studies and practices. The essay outlines a short history of the rise of Performance Studies, focussing on Richard Schechner’s work. According to him, a Performance Studies paradigm came to the fore in the mid-1950s, with books by Bateson, Austin, Goffman, Caillois and others. In the Sixties Schechner started to teach and was founder/director for influential theatre groups on the American avant-garde scene. When his interest shifted from theatre to performance and from aesthetics to social sciences, he found anthropology extremely useful because in ethnographies anthropologists treat the actual lived behaviours of people performatively. Schechner developed these assumptions and cooperated intensely with social scientists, in particular the anthropologist Victor Turner. In 1980 Schechner co-founded the Department of Performance Studies at NYU. Since then many academic institutions have started similar programs; Schechner’s books have been translated into many languages; and worldwide a growing cohort of scholars have been attracted to this stimulating, inter-disciplinary, threshold-crossing approach.
url https://raei.ua.es/article/view/2013-n26-performance-studies-floating-free-of-theatre-richard-schechner-and-the-rise-of-an-open-interdisciplinary-field
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