Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater
First full-scale thematic analysis of Pina Bausch’s Tanztheater, critically evaluating the impact of modernist theatre on her choreographic method
This book presents a new reading of Pina Bausch’s dance theatre, orienting it within an international legacy of performance practice. The discussion considers not only the influence of German and American modern dance on Bausch’s work but, crucially, interrogates parallels with modernist and postdramatic theatre (including Antonin Artaud, Samuel Beckett, Jerzy Grotowski, and Robert Wilson), the influence of which has been largely neglected in existing studies of her oeuvre.
Pina Bausch’s Dance Theatre provides a wide-ranging study of Bausch’s aesthetic and methods of practice, with case studies ranging from the beginning of her career to her final choreographies.
Key Features
The first full-scale study interrogating the relationship between Bausch’s Tanztheater and modernist theatre practice, structured around a chronological framework of case study choreographiesA new theorisation of the development of Bausch’s oeuvre, locating her approach in a broader context of intercultural artistic exchange in the post-WWII periodDraws on literary and theatre theory to form an interdisciplinary methodology for understanding and interrogating Bausch’s oeuvreBased on extensive archival research and a specialised knowledge of the evolution of modern dance

1127688077
Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater
First full-scale thematic analysis of Pina Bausch’s Tanztheater, critically evaluating the impact of modernist theatre on her choreographic method
This book presents a new reading of Pina Bausch’s dance theatre, orienting it within an international legacy of performance practice. The discussion considers not only the influence of German and American modern dance on Bausch’s work but, crucially, interrogates parallels with modernist and postdramatic theatre (including Antonin Artaud, Samuel Beckett, Jerzy Grotowski, and Robert Wilson), the influence of which has been largely neglected in existing studies of her oeuvre.
Pina Bausch’s Dance Theatre provides a wide-ranging study of Bausch’s aesthetic and methods of practice, with case studies ranging from the beginning of her career to her final choreographies.
Key Features
The first full-scale study interrogating the relationship between Bausch’s Tanztheater and modernist theatre practice, structured around a chronological framework of case study choreographiesA new theorisation of the development of Bausch’s oeuvre, locating her approach in a broader context of intercultural artistic exchange in the post-WWII periodDraws on literary and theatre theory to form an interdisciplinary methodology for understanding and interrogating Bausch’s oeuvreBased on extensive archival research and a specialised knowledge of the evolution of modern dance

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Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater

Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater

by Lucy Weir
Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater

Pina Bausch's Dance Theatre: Tracing the Evolution of Tanztheater

by Lucy Weir

Hardcover

$125.00 
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Overview

First full-scale thematic analysis of Pina Bausch’s Tanztheater, critically evaluating the impact of modernist theatre on her choreographic method
This book presents a new reading of Pina Bausch’s dance theatre, orienting it within an international legacy of performance practice. The discussion considers not only the influence of German and American modern dance on Bausch’s work but, crucially, interrogates parallels with modernist and postdramatic theatre (including Antonin Artaud, Samuel Beckett, Jerzy Grotowski, and Robert Wilson), the influence of which has been largely neglected in existing studies of her oeuvre.
Pina Bausch’s Dance Theatre provides a wide-ranging study of Bausch’s aesthetic and methods of practice, with case studies ranging from the beginning of her career to her final choreographies.
Key Features
The first full-scale study interrogating the relationship between Bausch’s Tanztheater and modernist theatre practice, structured around a chronological framework of case study choreographiesA new theorisation of the development of Bausch’s oeuvre, locating her approach in a broader context of intercultural artistic exchange in the post-WWII periodDraws on literary and theatre theory to form an interdisciplinary methodology for understanding and interrogating Bausch’s oeuvreBased on extensive archival research and a specialised knowledge of the evolution of modern dance


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781474436830
Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Publication date: 04/30/2018
Series: Edinburgh Critical Studies in Modernism, Drama and Performance
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x (d)

About the Author

Lucy Weir is Chancellor's Fellow in History of Art at Edinburgh College of Art, the University of Edinburgh. She is a specialist in modern dance and performance. Her research interests span the fields of live art, theatre and dance, and queer culture and gender studies. She received her PhD from the University of Glasgow in 2013 and has held several teaching and research fellowships. She previously taught at the University of Glasgow, Glasgow School of Art and the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland.

Table of Contents

List of illustrations

List of choreographies

Acknowledgements

Introduction

1 A Bilingual Dancer

Defining Dance Theatre

Learning a New Language: Bausch in the USA

Homecoming

Transnational Modernism: Orpheus und Eurydike

‘It’s not a metaphor. It is what it is’: Le Sacre du printemps

2 New Beginnings: The Origins of Bausch’s Tanztheater

Early Controversies: The Brecht/Weill Evening

Working from the Inside Out

The Haunted Self: Blaubart

A Theatre of Fragments: The Macbeth Project

3 Unmasked, Unfinished, Unresolved: A Dance Theatre of the Absurd

‘An Archaeology of the Everyday’

Returning the Gaze: Kontakthof

‘And then, Pina said…’: Walzer

4 Violent Acts: Traversing the Postwar Landscape

Performing Authoritarianism: Nelken

Addressing the Past: Auf dem Gebirge hat man ein Geschrei gehört

Engendering Trouble: Two Cigarettes in the Dark

5 Transient Tanztheater: The Co-Production Model

Excavating the Eternal City: Viktor

Circumventing Orientalism? The Co-Production Model

Finding a Universal Language: Masurca Fogo

‘Dance is the only true language’: Água

6 ‘I only tried to speak about us’

Ein Stück von Pina Bausch? Passing on the Work

Ageing Gracefully

Turning Back to Dance: Vollmond

On Not Forgetting: ‘Sweet Mambo’

Bibliography

Index

What People are Saying About This

Eloquent and probing, Lucy Weir's astonishing book on the late German choreographer Pina Bausch and her Wuppertaler company is a milestone for a fresh and invigorating Anglo-American reception of tanztheater, rediscovering Bausch's early residency in New York, her processing of parallel modern legacies of ballet and dance and her radical shaping of these idioms into a new theatrical language and rehearsal method. Weir's explorations are wide-ranging and brilliant in their insights and interpretive rigor, leading us through decades of work to the late transcultural ‘World Cities' productions, and the challenging promise of how to continue the dance after Bausch.

Brunel University Johannes Birringer

Eloquent and probing, Lucy Weir's astonishing book on the late German choreographer Pina Bausch and her Wuppertaler company is a milestone for a fresh and invigorating Anglo-American reception of tanztheater, rediscovering Bausch's early residency in New York, her processing of parallel modern legacies of ballet and dance and her radical shaping of these idioms into a new theatrical language and rehearsal method. Weir's explorations are wide-ranging and brilliant in their insights and interpretive rigor, leading us through decades of work to the late transcultural ‘World Cities' productions, and the challenging promise of how to continue the dance after Bausch.

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