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022_000061/0000

Ambiguous Topicality: a Philther of State-Socialist Hungarian Theatre

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Auteur
Árpád Kékesi Kun
Field of science
Előadóművészet (zene, színháztudomány, dramaturgia) / Performing arts studies (Musicology, Theater science, Dramaturgy) (13051)
Series
Collection Károli. Monograph
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000061/0008
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Page 9 [9]
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022_000061/0008

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INTRODUCTION PHILTHER AS A HISTORIOGRAPHIC MODEL o> This book focuses on theatre productions in times of state socialism in Hungary according to the protocol of Philther, which is both a method of writing theatre history and a website. These two, however, are interlinked. Both were developed at the Department of Theatre Studies of Karoli Gaspar University, Budapest by Magdolna Jakfalvi, Arpad Kékesi Kun and Gabriella Kiss between 2010 and 2014 in a project financed by the Hungarian Scientific Research Fund (OTKA). The acronym ‘Philther’ comes from two words, ‘philology’ and ‘theatre’, referring to the subject of the research as well as to its nature, basic and applied research alike. The project behind it aims at exploring the recent decades of Hungarian theatre history and presenting them by means of digital culture. Almost two centuries of Hungarian theatre history (from the end of the 18" to the middle of the 20" century) have already been well researched and the results are available in three separate handbooks with more than 3,000 pages altogether. If we look at them from the periodization of Theatre Histories, edited by Gary Jay Williams, first published in 2006 and based on the assumption that “theatre and performance [are] complex kinds of communal reflection and communication”, determined both culturally and historically, these three companions discuss Hungarian theatre in the era of print culture and, in part, in modern media culture.* However, Hungarian theatre in the era of globalization and virtual communication, dating from 1950, has not been the subject of a similarly comprehensive examination yet. Philther tries to fill this gap, adapted to the most influential medium and mode of communication of the period under examination, as far as the representation of results is concerned. Leaving the two-dimensional pages of handbooks and taking advantage of the possibilities of the world wide web, the dynamics of photographs, motion pictures and textual references, Philther captures ! Ferenc Kerényi (ed.): Magyar szinhäztörtenet 1790-1873, Budapest, Akadémiai, 1990; György Székely — Tamäs Gajdö (eds.): Magyar szinhaztörtenet 1873-1920, Budapest, Magyar Könyvklub - OSZMI, 2001; Tamäs Becsy — György Székely — Tamás Gajdö (eds.): Magyar szinhäztôrténet 1920-1949, Budapest, Magyar Kônyvklub, 2005. 2 Gary Jay Williams (ed.): Theatre Histories. An Introduction, London — New York, Routledge, 2006, xxvii.

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