Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances

This research approaches spectatorship in immersive performances by combining models of spectatorial agency and the agency of space with a practice of post-performance conversations and correspondence with audiences. Immersive performances often place spectators at the heart of the event, framing em...

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Main Author: Binette, Mélanie
Format: Others
Published: 2014
Online Access:http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/978496/1/Binette_MA_S2014.pdf
Binette, Mélanie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Binette=3AM=E9lanie=3A=3A.html> (2014) Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-QMG.9784962014-07-04T04:42:00Z Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances Binette, Mélanie This research approaches spectatorship in immersive performances by combining models of spectatorial agency and the agency of space with a practice of post-performance conversations and correspondence with audiences. Immersive performances often place spectators at the heart of the event, framing embodied experiences and social interactions as material for aesthetic explorations. Debates in aesthetic theory have sometimes condemned the focus of such events on spectatorial participation, describing it as rather manipulative and disempowering. This thesis negotiates the theoretical discourse with an empirical approach to audiences, by exploring different perspectives through spectators’ accounts of their experience. Immersive performances heighten the experience of space by creating aesthetic environments in which spectators encounter other forms of agency: those of the world(s) and those of the inanimate things surrounding spectators. This thesis investigates how immersive performances may both transform the way that spectators perceive space and trigger their critical and creative thinking about their environment. The four case studies examined in this research proposed spaces that created a flexible experience for spectators in which they could perform their difference. Two of the performances under study were produced in London, United Kingdom, where the notion of immersion in performance has recently pervaded the contemporary performance scene and theoretical discourse. The other two performances happened at Concordia University during the 2012 student strike and engaged with this emotionally gripping political context, exemplifying how immersive performances may introduce counter-narratives in institutional spaces that trigger political and critical thoughts. 2014-04-15 Thesis NonPeerReviewed application/pdf http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/978496/1/Binette_MA_S2014.pdf Binette, Mélanie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Binette=3AM=E9lanie=3A=3A.html> (2014) Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances. Masters thesis, Concordia University. http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/978496/
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format Others
sources NDLTD
description This research approaches spectatorship in immersive performances by combining models of spectatorial agency and the agency of space with a practice of post-performance conversations and correspondence with audiences. Immersive performances often place spectators at the heart of the event, framing embodied experiences and social interactions as material for aesthetic explorations. Debates in aesthetic theory have sometimes condemned the focus of such events on spectatorial participation, describing it as rather manipulative and disempowering. This thesis negotiates the theoretical discourse with an empirical approach to audiences, by exploring different perspectives through spectators’ accounts of their experience. Immersive performances heighten the experience of space by creating aesthetic environments in which spectators encounter other forms of agency: those of the world(s) and those of the inanimate things surrounding spectators. This thesis investigates how immersive performances may both transform the way that spectators perceive space and trigger their critical and creative thinking about their environment. The four case studies examined in this research proposed spaces that created a flexible experience for spectators in which they could perform their difference. Two of the performances under study were produced in London, United Kingdom, where the notion of immersion in performance has recently pervaded the contemporary performance scene and theoretical discourse. The other two performances happened at Concordia University during the 2012 student strike and engaged with this emotionally gripping political context, exemplifying how immersive performances may introduce counter-narratives in institutional spaces that trigger political and critical thoughts.
author Binette, Mélanie
spellingShingle Binette, Mélanie
Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
author_facet Binette, Mélanie
author_sort Binette, Mélanie
title Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
title_short Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
title_full Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
title_fullStr Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
title_full_unstemmed Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances
title_sort spatial encounters: spectatorship in immersive performances
publishDate 2014
url http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/978496/1/Binette_MA_S2014.pdf
Binette, Mélanie <http://spectrum.library.concordia.ca/view/creators/Binette=3AM=E9lanie=3A=3A.html> (2014) Spatial Encounters: Spectatorship in Immersive Performances. Masters thesis, Concordia University.
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