dc.description.abstract | Theatre, Theatricality, and Resistance is concerned with how certain elements of
contemporary Western - mainly British and Hungarian - culture are manifested through
theatrical activity, both on and off stage. In so doing, the thesis asks the extent to which
resistance is pc'ssible in contemporary theatre and theatricality.
The thesis argues that conventional Western theatre is grounded in escapism and
nostalgia. Restricted by its own institutional system, ideological function, and
commercial aims, conventional theatre reaffirms the spectators' psychological and
emotional desires, and confirms the hegemonic views and assumptions of contemporary
postindustrial societies. In so doing, it silences the various voices available in society
and erases even the possibility of resistance.
Then the thesis proposes that while theatre is regarded as a marginalized
commodity on the cultural market, theatricality has now produced a number of new
practices in postindustrial societies. As the everyday appears as representation in
various, constantly evolving and continuously improvised, collective and individual
cultural perfor'nances, theatricality is not only thoroughly utilised by dominant social
groups, but is also open to resistant voices left out of public discourses. These voices
express their resistance by rewriting the means, practices, and strategies that the
dominant culture employs.
Finally, the thesis investigates those theatre practices (labelled `resistant') that
are alert to recent changes in theatricalised society. These practices reconsider social,
political, and cultural boundaries; confront logocentricity; and place equal emphasis on
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visual, oral, textual, and proximal elements, as well as the audience's creative-interactive
participation. Theatre can thus reflect on the anomalies of the theatricalised society,
social and sexual (in)difference, gender assumptions, and ethnic stereotyping, and resist
the lure of power. Through these practices, theatre may attain complexity, endangering
institutions, hierarchies and power, and offer alternatives to the dominant ideology by
fusing popular and high culture, and giving visual, textual, intellectual and sensual
pleasure to its participants. | en_US |