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  • Gestures of Music Theater: The Performativity of Song and Dance

    Gestures of Music Theater by Symonds, Dominic; Taylor, Millie;

    The Performativity of Song and Dance

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 145.00
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    69 273 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 16 January 2014

    • ISBN 9780199997152
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages336 pages
    • Size 163x239x22 mm
    • Weight 612 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 33 images
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    Short description:

    Gestures of Music Theater explores examples of Song and Dance as performative gestures that entertain and affect audiences. The chapters interact to reveal the complex energies of performativity. In experiencing these energies, music theatre is revealed as a dynamic accretion of active, complex and dialogical experiences.

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    Long description:

    Gestures of Music Theater: The Performativity of Song and Dance offers new cutting edge essays focusing on Song and Dance as performative gestures that not only entertain but also act on audiences and performers. The chapters range across musical theatre, opera, theatre and other artistic practices, from Glee to Gardzienice, Beckett to Disney, Broadway to Turner Prize winning sound installation. The chapters draw together these diverse examples of vocality and physicality by exploring their affect rather than through considering them as texts.

    This book considers performativity in relation to Dramaturgy, Transition, Identity, Context, Practice, Community and finally, Writing. The book reveals how the texture of music theatre, containing as it does the gestures of song and dance, is performative in dense, interwoven, dialogical and paradoxical ways, partly caused by the intertextual and interdisciplinary energies of its make-up, partly by its active dynamism in performance. The book's contributors derive methodologies from many disciplines, seeking in many ways to resist and explode discrete discipline-based enquiry. They share methodologies and performance repertoires with discipline-based scholarship from theatre studies, musicology and cultural studies, but there are many other approaches and case studies which we also embrace. Together, they view these as neighboring voices whose dialogue enriches the study of contemporary music theatre.

    This book makes for a very rewarding read: it combines an excellent selection of emerging and established scholars and practitioners' voices and despite its diversity with regard to genre, time, methodology and focus, it is held together firmly by a very specific and timely common research question: how song and dance can be read as performative gestures. The editors and contributors demonstrate vividly how song and dance are not merely the concern of a limited group of musicologists and dance scholars, but are omnipresent in our culture and provide a fascinating prism through which to see and understand human communication.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction: Singing the Dance, Dancing the Song
    Chapter 1: The Song's the Thing: Capturing the "Sung" to Make it "Song"
    Chapter 2: The (Un)Pleasure of Song: On the Enjoyment of Listening to Opera
    Performativity as Dramaturgy
    Chapter 3: Relocating the Song: Julie Taymor's Jukebox Musical Across the Universe (2007)
    Chapter 4: Dynamic shape: the Dramaturgy of Song and Dance in Lloyd Webber's Cats (1981)
    Performativity as Transition
    Chapter 5: Dance Breaks and Dream Ballets: Transitional Moments in Musical Theater
    Chapter 6: "Love Let Me Sing you": The Liminality of Song and Dance in La Chiusa's Bernarda Alba (2006)
    Performativity as Identity
    Chapter 7: Tapping the Ivories: Jazz and Tap Dance in Jelly's Last Jam (1992).
    Chapter 8: Everything's Coming up Kurt: the Broadway Song in Glee
    Chapter 9: Angry Dance: Postmodern Innovation, Masculinities and Gender Subversion
    Performativity as Context
    Chapter 10: Deconstructing the Singer: the Concerts of Laurie Anderson
    Chapter 11: Singing and a Song: The "Intimate Difference" in Susan Philipsz's Lowlands (2010)
    Chapter 12: Acting Operatically: Body, Voice and the Actress in Beckett's Theater
    Performativity as Practice
    Chapter 13: Vox Elettronica: Song, Dance and Live Electronics in the Practice of Sound Theater
    Chapter 14: From Ear to Foot: How Choreographers Interpret Music
    Chapter 15: Singing from Stones: Physiovocality and Gardzienice's Theater of Musicality
    Performativity as Community
    Chapter 16: Singing the Community: the Musical Theater Chorus as Character
    Chapter 17: Singing and Dancing Ourselves: The Politics of the Ensemble in A Chorus Line (1975)
    Performativity as Writing
    Bibliography
    Index
    Bibliography

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