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_000047/0063
  • Volume Overview
  • Page
  • Text
  • Metadata
  • Clipping
Page 64 [64]
  • Preview
  • Show Permalink
  • JPG
  • TIFF
  • Prev
  • Next
022_000047/0063

OCR

JAN L. HAGENS Before developing my argument further, let me highlight, often with reference to Braungart’s writings, some of the core characteristics shared by ritual and theatrical performance that may help promote positive resolution to dramatic conflict: 1.) Ritual and theater bring people together. As Braungart states, ritual is “performed by a community or for a community” and upholds values that “provide a sense of community and unity.”" The collective playing and watching in the theatron, the looking-place, creates a togetherness that presupposes and supports social belonging. Ritualistic elements in theater can help make it more participatory, enabling more shared emotion and more empathy. Braungart mentions the “celebratory, festive nature” of ritual, which may contribute to positive outcomes, both in ritual and in theater." 2.) Braungart writes that ritual is “aesthetically designed and selfreferential.”'® Both ritual and theater may exhibit self-referentiality, but, as must be obvious from my present analysis, I do hold these characteristics to be primary not so much for ritual as for drama; Braungart himself agrees.’® Ritual does its work best when it induces a state of participation that merges on the unconscious, that involves even the subconscious, reaching maybe not higher, but deeper. In drama, aesthetic self-reference can induce spectatorial self-reflection, which may then promote the critical distance that allows for careful conflict resolution. In a best-case scenario, drama’s self-reference can alleviate pragmatic pressure, allowing for the ideational space and psychological distance that favor conflict resolution. 3.) However, like theater, ritual provides a condensation of past and future in the present moment; this leads both to an intensification, a heightening of emotion, and to an essentializing and universalizing.’’ Ritual’s symbols, just like drama’s “presentative symbolism,” create and convey significance beyond discursive conceptual meaning.'* The integration of ritualistic elements into performance may thus bring into reach what otherwise would remain ungraspable and unrelatable, and it could thus open up new pathways of resolution. 4.) According to Braungart, repetition is another defining feature of ritual.” Repetition may render a behavior unperceived and unconscious — or it may put it at a distance, thus allowing for a working-through, to avoid the dead end of mindless violence and reach positive resolution. Closely related to repetition is a feature that appears to me to be of crucial importance: the process of ritual 3 Braungart: Ibid., 427, 428. 4° Braungart: Ibid., 427. 15 Ibid. Braungart: Ritual und Literatur, 220. For a more elaborate argument regarding the notion that ritual compresses meanings and heightens emotions, see Stroup: Ritual and Ceremony, 144. 8° Braungart: Ritual, 433; see also Stroup: Ibid., 140-141. 1% Braungart: Ibid., 427. + 62 +

Structural

Custom

Image Metadata

Image width
1830 px
Image height
2834 px
Image resolution
300 px/inch
Original File Size
1.19 MB
Permalink to jpg
022_000047/0063.jpg
Permalink to ocr
022_000047/0063.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