Skip to main content
mobile

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu
LoginRegister
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Preview
022_000047/0000

Poetic Rituality in Theater and Literature

  • Preview
  • PDF
  • Show Metadata
  • Show Permalink
Field of science
Művészetek (művészetek, művészettörténet, előadóművészetek, zene) / Arts (arts, history of arts, performing arts, music) (13039), Vizuális művészetek, előadóművészetek, dizájn / Visual arts, performing arts, design (13046), Irodalomelmélet / Literary theory (13022)
Series
Collection Károli
Type of publication
tanulmánykötet
022_000047/0061
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Page 62 [62]
  • Preview
  • Show Permalink
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Prev
  • Next
022_000047/0061

OCR

JAN L. HAGENS aesthetic and a social function, its integration into theatrical performance should increase theaters ability to achieve extra-theatrical effects, such as solutions in the social realm.° Another side-glance into ritual theory may support this view. Turner labeled structured social conflict as “social drama,” and he recognized a pattern of events, a recurring course of action: “breach, crisis, redress, restoration of peace through reconciliation or mutual acceptance of schism,” i.e., violation ofa social rule, conflict, attempts at solution, and finally either acceptance of division or, preferably, reintegration; in the crucial phase of this process, the action of redress, ritual plays a major role.” Note how Turner’s view of ritual is decidedly different from the view that is now prevalent in performance studies and on the contemporary stage, which is dominated by conflict and destruction and which stops short of considering reintegration. Note also that in Turner’s view ofritual, negativity and obliteration are important phases, but are mostly to be considered as integrated parts of a comprehensive process. Altogether, Turner’s sequential template for social drama, especially through its telos of reintegration, suggests that ritual may be able to support the project of conflict resolution in artistic drama as well. Braungart emphasizes that ritual and literature are not fundamentally different: he insists that, on the one hand, “ritual is not simply a forced social event,” and on the other hand, “literature is not autonomous and selfdetermined." Or, to formulate the relation in Victor Turner’s terms: social drama and artistic drama imply each other, because artistic drama unfolds according to the basic pattern of social drama, but we best understand such social drama by applying the interpretive categories of artistic drama: “The processual form of social dramas is implicit in aesthetic dramas (even if only by reversal or negation), while the rhetoric of social dramas — and hence the shape of argument — is drawn from cultural performances.”® This mutual implication does not mean that social drama and artistic drama are identical — quite the contrary: Turner even branded ritual, in contrast to drama, as regressive and totalitarian. One way to describe the development of Western theater over the course of the past century would be as an attempt to connect or re-connect with ritual, and Turner was quite adversarial toward such attempts. For him, the ritual theater, as for instance represented in a director such as Grotowski, “wishes to ‘reliminalize’ or ‘retribalize’ if not all modern Wolfgang Braungart: Ritual, in D. Weidner (ed.), Handbuch Literatur und Religion, Stuttgart, Metzler, 2016, 431. Turner, Victor: Acting in Everyday Life and Everyday Life in Acting, in Play, Flow, and Ritual: An Essay in Comparative Symbology, in From Ritual to Theatre: The Human Seriousness of Play, New York, Performing Arts Journal Publications, 1982, 102-123, 111. 8 Braungart: Ritual, 429. Victor Turner: Dramatic Ritual / Ritual Drama: Performative and Reflexive Anthropology, Kenyon Review 1.3 (1979), 81. * 60 °

Structural

Custom

Image Metadata

Image width
1830 px
Image height
2834 px
Image resolution
300 px/inch
Original File Size
1.24 MB
Permalink to jpg
022_000047/0061.jpg
Permalink to ocr
022_000047/0061.ocr

Links

  • L'Harmattan Könyvkiadó
  • Open Access Blog
  • Kiadványaink az MTMT-ben
  • Kiadványaink a REAL-ban
  • CrossRef Works
  • ROR ID

Contact

  • L'Harmattan Szerkesztőség
  • Kéziratleadási szabályzat
  • Peer Review Policy
  • Adatvédelmi irányelvek
  • Dokumentumtár
  • KBART lists
  • eduID Belépés

Social media

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn

L'Harmattan Open Access platform

LoginRegister

User login

eduId Login
I forgot my password
  • Search
  • OA Collections
  • L'Harmattan Archive
Englishen
  • Françaisfr
  • Deutschde
  • Magyarhu