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Brecht on Theatre - The Development of an Aesthetic

Inglese · Tascabile

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Brecht on Theatre is a seminal work that has remained the classic text for readers and students wanting a rich appreciation of the development of Brecht's thinking on theatre and aesthetics. First published in 1964 and on reading lists ever since, it has now been wholly revised, re-edited and expanded with additional texts, illustrations and editorial material, and new translations. The resulting work is a far fuller and more accurate volume that will provide readers with a clearer and more rewarding understanding of Brecht's work and writings. This updated third edition features:. Clearer layout and organisation of the text to facilitate study . New translations of many of the Brechtian texts featured . Over 40 new, previously untranslated essays. Essay titles now correspond to the German originals . A revised selection of illustrationsThis selection of Bertolt Brecht's critical writing charts the development of his thinking on theatre and aesthetics over four decades. The volume demonstrates how the theories of Epic Theatre and Verfremdung evolved, and contains notes and essays on the staging of The Threepenny Opera , Mahagonny , Mother Courage , Puntila , Galileo and many others of his plays. Also included is 'Short Organon for the Theatre', Brecht's most complete statement of his revolutionary philosophy of the theatre.

Sommario

List of Illustrations
General Introduction and Acknowledgements

Part One - A New Theatre
Introduction to Part One
Frank Wedekind (1918)
Me in the Theatre (1920)
Theatre as Sport (1920)
A Reckoning (1920)
On the Aesthetics of Drama (1920)
On the 'Downfall of the Theatre' (1925)
More Good Sport (1926)
Three Cheers for Shaw (1926)
Prologue to Drums (1926)
Shouldn't We Liquidate Aesthetics? (1927)
Epic Theatre and Its Difficulties (1927)
On New Dramatic Writing (1928)
Latest Stage: Oedipus (1929)
Dialogue about Acting (1929)
On Subject-Matter and Form (1929)
On Rehearsing (c. 1930)
Dialectical Dramatic Writing (1930/31)
Notes on the Opera Rise and Fall of the City of Mahagonny (1930)
Notes on the Threepenny Opera (1931)
Notes on the Comedy Man Equals Man (1931/38)
Notes on The Mother (1933/38)

Part Two - Exile Years
Introduction to Part Two
OLD VS. NEW THEATRE
Theatre for Pleasure or Theatre for Instruction (1935)
On Experiments in Epic Theatre (1935)
The German Drama: pre-Hitler (1935)
On the Use of Music in an Epic Theatre (1935)
Short List of the Most Frequent, Common and Boring Misconceptions about Epic Theatre (1937)
The Progressiveness of the Stanislavsky System (1937)
On Experimental Theatre (1939)
A Short Private Lecture for My Friend Max Gorelik (1944)
ON CHINESE THEATRE, VERFREMDUNG AND GESTUS
On the Art of Spectatorship (1935)
Maintaining Gestures over Multiple Generations (1935)
Verfremdung Effects in Chinese Acting (1936)
Three Notes on Verfremdung and the Elder Breughel (1937)
Verfremdung Techniques in the Narrative Pictures of the Elder Brueghel
On the V-effect of the Elder Breughel
V-effects in Some Pictures of the Elder Breughel
On Determining the Zero Point (1936/37)
The Zero Point (1936/37)
Notes on Pointed Heads and Round Heads (1936)
On the Production of the V-effect (1938)
On Gestic Music (1937)
On Rhymeless Verse with Irregular Rhythms (1938)
The Street Scene (1938)
Short Description of a New Technique of Acting that Produces a Verfremdung Effect (1940)
Athletic Training (1940)
On Epic Dramatic Art: Change (1940)
On the Gradual Approach to the Study and Construction of the Figure (1941)
REALISM AND THE PROLETARIAT
The Popular and the Realistic (1938)
Two Essay Fragments on Non-professional (1939)
The Attitude of the Rehearsal Director (in the Inductive Process) (1939)
Notes on the Folk Play (1940)

Part Three - Return to Germany
Introduction to Part Three
SHORT ORGANON
Short Organon for the Theatre (1948)
Appendices to the Short Organon (1954)
THEATRE WORK
Friedrich Wolf - Bert Brecht: Formal Problems Arising from the Theatre's New Content.
A Dialogue (1949)
From a Letter to an Actor (1951)
What Makes an Actor (1951)
Gesture (1951)
Two Notes about Urfaust (1952)
About Our Stagings
The Story
Kurt Palm (1952)
Classical Status as an Intimidating Factor (1954)
ON STANISLAVSKY
Some of the Things That Can Be Learnt from Stanislavsky (1951)
On Stanislavsky (1953)
Stanislavsky Studies [3] (1953)
A Few Thoughts on the Stanislavsky Conference (1953)
DIALECTICAL THEATRE
From Epic to Dialectical Theatre 2 (1954)
Dialectics in the Theatre
Study of the First Scene of Shakespeare's 'Coriolanus' (1953/55)
Relative Haste (1955)
A Detour (The Caucasian Chalk Circle) (1955)
Another Case of Applied Dialectic (1953)
Letter to the Actor Playing Young Hörder in Winter Battle (1954)
Mother Courage Played in Two Ways (1951)
Example of a Scenic Innovation Through the Observation of a Mistake (1953)
Something about Representing Character (1953)
Conversation about Coerced Empathy (1953)
MISCELLANEOUS
Cultural Policy and Academy of Arts (1953)
Socialist Realism in the Theatre (1954)
Can the Present-day World Be Reproduced by Means of Theatre? (1955)
Our London Season (1956)

Select Bibliography
Index

Relazione

Brecht on Theatre has long introduced countless readers to the theatre theories of Bertolt Brecht. Originally compiled and edited by John Willett in 1964, the volume was innovative and comprehensive in its time: essays only recently published in German were suddenly available in English, offering insights into the development of ideas stretching from 1918 to days before Brecht's death in 1956. However, Brecht scholarship and the needs of an interested public have changed greatly over the intervening fifty years, and the new edition . addresses several important issues. First, there is simply the amount of new material that has come to light over the years . Second, the retained essays have been judiciously retranslated and their titles have been returned to more literal renditions . Third, the volume has great intellectual coherence. Rather than imitating Willett's adherence to chronology, the editors acknowledge the principle while diverging on occasion to group thematically related terms and thus allow a clearer overview of Brecht's evolving thoughts. David Barnett New Theatre Quarterly

Dettagli sul prodotto

Autori Bertolt Brecht
Con la collaborazione di Professor Steve Giles (Editore), Tom Kuhn (Editore), Marc Silberman (Editore), John Willett (Editore), Jack Davis (Traduzione), Romy Fursland (Traduzione), Steve Giles (Traduzione), Victoria Hill (Traduzione), Kristopher Imbrigotta (Traduzione), Marc Silberman (Traduzione), John Willett (Traduzione)
Editore Methuen Drama
 
Lingue Inglese
Formato Tascabile
Pubblicazione 20.11.2014
 
EAN 9781408145456
ISBN 978-1-4081-4545-6
Pagine 344
Serie Methuen Drama
Categorie Saggistica > Musica, film, teatro
Scienze umane, arte, musica > Scienze linguistiche e letterarie > Letteratura / linguistica inglese

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