Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen

Thanks to its inherent nature, theatre has been better able than other artforms to resist the challenges presented by information and digital culture, which are based on the principle of reproduction. Since a theatrical text is created anew each time, an audience can enter into a real-time dialogue...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lilia M. Nemchenko
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ural Federal University 2020-12-01
Series:Changing Societies & Personalities
Online Access:https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/147
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spelling doaj-dae17d602eef47a3afb9d1d98a463eed2021-01-19T08:43:17ZengUral Federal UniversityChanging Societies & Personalities2587-61042587-89642020-12-014445747510.15826/csp.2020.4.4.111147Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre OnscreenLilia M. Nemchenko0Ural Federal University, Yekaterinburg, RussiaThanks to its inherent nature, theatre has been better able than other artforms to resist the challenges presented by information and digital culture, which are based on the principle of reproduction. Since a theatrical text is created anew each time, an audience can enter into a real-time dialogue with a concrete group of players recreating an authorial concept. This is true even when, as in director’s theatre, a director’s interpretation is performed by different acting companies. Today, however, the hubris of theatre critics and enthusiasts, who value unmediated dialogue as a pre-condition of theatrical pragmatics, has collided with the novel theatrical practice of live broadcasting, which was preceded by the standalone genres of radio and television plays. As a performance art, theatre possesses characteristics of a virtual object, where the information about such an object exists only in the memories of audiences or professional critics. In becoming digitised, theatre loses its former character – the uniqueness of presence in a concrete theatrical here-and-now that can never be repeated – and acquires a new mode of existence within a movie theatre represented in Russia by the Theatre HD project, which translates the theatrical educational mission into the digital age by involving new participants in creative dialogue.https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/147
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lilia M. Nemchenko
spellingShingle Lilia M. Nemchenko
Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
Changing Societies & Personalities
author_facet Lilia M. Nemchenko
author_sort Lilia M. Nemchenko
title Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
title_short Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
title_full Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
title_fullStr Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
title_full_unstemmed Theatrical Dialogue in the Digital Age: From Director’s Theatre to the Theatre Onscreen
title_sort theatrical dialogue in the digital age: from director’s theatre to the theatre onscreen
publisher Ural Federal University
series Changing Societies & Personalities
issn 2587-6104
2587-8964
publishDate 2020-12-01
description Thanks to its inherent nature, theatre has been better able than other artforms to resist the challenges presented by information and digital culture, which are based on the principle of reproduction. Since a theatrical text is created anew each time, an audience can enter into a real-time dialogue with a concrete group of players recreating an authorial concept. This is true even when, as in director’s theatre, a director’s interpretation is performed by different acting companies. Today, however, the hubris of theatre critics and enthusiasts, who value unmediated dialogue as a pre-condition of theatrical pragmatics, has collided with the novel theatrical practice of live broadcasting, which was preceded by the standalone genres of radio and television plays. As a performance art, theatre possesses characteristics of a virtual object, where the information about such an object exists only in the memories of audiences or professional critics. In becoming digitised, theatre loses its former character – the uniqueness of presence in a concrete theatrical here-and-now that can never be repeated – and acquires a new mode of existence within a movie theatre represented in Russia by the Theatre HD project, which translates the theatrical educational mission into the digital age by involving new participants in creative dialogue.
url https://changing-sp.com/ojs/index.php/csp/article/view/147
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