Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial
Death disrupts. The social space accorded to rituals of death and memorialization differs from all other spaces. Actresses disturb. Society contests, determines, and enacts the burial of an actress as her final performance. This study explores the actress burial as a site of meaning. Contestations...
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ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-1112101-1500392013-01-07T22:47:46Z Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial Mather, Christine Courtland Theater Death disrupts. The social space accorded to rituals of death and memorialization differs from all other spaces. Actresses disturb. Society contests, determines, and enacts the burial of an actress as her final performance. This study explores the actress burial as a site of meaning. Contestations over the fate of the actress body reveal power structures and the motivations of cultural institutions. This study highlights four actressesLecouvreur, Oldfield, Bernhardt, and Dusewhose burials cover a wide range of circumstances. Each chapter gives the relevant biographical information for the actress and the social background for the cultural contestation over the actress body. Traditional history often overlooks the contestations of the burial moment in its attempts to find meaning from the recorded life. As a strategy for this study I ask, what if we take death not as the end but as the beginning of a new cultural operation? What if we posit the actress burial as a key time in a process that continues to produce social meaning even as the body that initiated the action disappears from view? Currently, actress burials in the theatrical historical record provide a starting point without a meaningful exposition. Without an evaluation of what occurred after an actresss death, neither an actresss effect on a culture or that culture's effect on her can be understood. Actresses not only embody a signifying/surrogacy function, their burial also reflects the cultures attitude toward women. The intensified reaction to actresses ranges from extreme antitheatrical prejudice to worshipful admiration, strikingly displayed in the fate of the actress body. Katrina Powell Jennifer Jones Leslie A Wade Femi Euba LSU 2001-11-14 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1112101-150039/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1112101-150039/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation. |
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Theater Mather, Christine Courtland Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
description |
Death disrupts. The social space accorded to rituals of death and memorialization differs from all other spaces. Actresses disturb. Society contests, determines, and enacts the burial of an actress as her final performance. This study explores the actress burial as a site of meaning.
Contestations over the fate of the actress body reveal power structures and the motivations of cultural institutions. This study highlights four actressesLecouvreur, Oldfield, Bernhardt, and Dusewhose burials cover a wide range of circumstances. Each chapter gives the relevant biographical information for the actress and the social background for the cultural contestation over the actress body.
Traditional history often overlooks the contestations of the burial moment in its attempts to find meaning from the recorded life. As a strategy for this study I ask, what if we take death not as the end but as the beginning of a new cultural operation? What if we posit the actress burial as a key time in a process that continues to produce social meaning even as the body that initiated the action disappears from view?
Currently, actress burials in the theatrical historical record provide a starting point without a meaningful exposition. Without an evaluation of what occurred after an actresss death, neither an actresss effect on a culture or that culture's effect on her can be understood. Actresses not only embody a signifying/surrogacy function, their burial also reflects the cultures attitude toward women. The intensified reaction to actresses ranges from extreme antitheatrical prejudice to worshipful admiration, strikingly displayed in the fate of the actress body. |
author2 |
Katrina Powell |
author_facet |
Katrina Powell Mather, Christine Courtland |
author |
Mather, Christine Courtland |
author_sort |
Mather, Christine Courtland |
title |
Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
title_short |
Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
title_full |
Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
title_fullStr |
Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
title_full_unstemmed |
Grave Matter: Contestations in Actress Burial |
title_sort |
grave matter: contestations in actress burial |
publisher |
LSU |
publishDate |
2001 |
url |
http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-1112101-150039/ |
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AT matherchristinecourtland gravemattercontestationsinactressburial |
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