The work published between 1992- 2000 and presented here forms a continuing meditation on,
and exploration of contemporary performance. The term 'contemporary performance' is used to
refer to practices and discourses in the performance arts that have occurred over the last decade.
There is a particular emphasis on those unstable, hybrid and interdisciplinary areas of
performance (including performance art, installation, 'new' dance, 'experimental' theatre, 'live'
art) which resist easy definition or categorisation, and which may be further characterised as
postmodern in the sense of a reflexive, contextualised and knowingly problematic practice.
More specifically the work builds a sustained thesis on contemporary practice and addresses in a
number ways some of the central issues surrounding the placing and practice of performance. It
focuses on relationships between performance, textuality, the body, and spatiality; as well as
on issues of context, framing and the place of performance in contemporary culture. The work
engages with a number key terms applied to contemporary performance including ephemerality,
displacement, equivalence and ecology, which contribute to the central thesis that
contemporary performance is an unsettled yet always contextualised practice which resists
fixities and holds itself between a condition of fragmentation and integration.
Contemporary performance is considered from a number of points of view:
• as performance: where the events and relationships which constitute performance
can be documented and mapped;
• as contextualised practice: where the conditions that enable or disable
performance can be identified;
• as process : where the dynamics and media of performance can be situated;
• as site : where the frames, surfaces and boundaries of performance can be
examined;
• as ecology: where the internal and external interdependencies of performance can
be identified;
• as a problematic: where the terms and assumptions that constitute a reading of
performance can be identified and analysed.
Two key ideas inform the thesis that emerges from the work: firstly the recognition of an ethical
stance towards performance; and secondly the search for a methodology which can disclose the
dynamics of performance. The 'acts of writing' are seen as an active as well as reflective
methodology - an engagement with the event of performance understood as a located,
contextualised practice. The published work presented here sets out some of the underlying
conditions and methodologies from which my work in the field of contemporary performance
proceeds.
As a thesis it provides sustained evidence of a 'multiple practice'- that is a set of practices and
engagements in the field of research that explore what might be termed the 'ecology' of
contemporary performance from various positions. This multiple practice is a way of locating
the work and of attempting to realise an ethical stance towards performance. The recognition
that the conditions of contemporary performance depend on an interdependency of contexts
and that performance situates itself as an unstable catalyst that oscillates between these contexts
has enabled me to locate my research into contemporary performance in the variety of ways
evidenced by the published output collected here.
Date of Award | 2000 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Acts of Writing: Writings on Contemporary Performance
ALLSOPP, R. D. (Author). 2000
Student thesis: PhD