Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action

The present article addresses the rather complex notion of scenography in relation to historical research. Two performances of Henrik Ibsens’s Peer Gynt are presented as case studies with the aim of stimulating scenographic analyses of historical material. This approach does not dismiss the importan...

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Main Author: Astrid von Rosen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Septentrio Academic Publishing 2015-02-01
Series:Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
Online Access:https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3379
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author Astrid von Rosen
author_facet Astrid von Rosen
author_sort Astrid von Rosen
collection DOAJ
description The present article addresses the rather complex notion of scenography in relation to historical research. Two performances of Henrik Ibsens’s Peer Gynt are presented as case studies with the aim of stimulating scenographic analyses of historical material. This approach does not dismiss the importance of the dramatic text, or the actors, or the various contexts in which the performances take place. On the contrary, I strongly believe that one always has to account for the multifarious complexity of a theatrical event. However, my research is guided by an interest in exploring ways of accessing long-past practices, forms and events, rather than relying on the assumption that one recovers something stable and fixed. What I claim is very simple: much more reliable knowledge can be produced by exploring, and working with traces from past events and theatrical processes. This approach can be associated with a current trend in theatre studies, in which “historical research has once more come to the fore” (Tessing Schneider & Skjoldager-Nielsen, 2011, 5) as well as an ethic of “being-with” the objects of investigation found in artistic research (e.g. Hannula 2008). On a general level, my approach can be associated with the affective turn in the humanities. Acknowledging corporeality, materiality and sensuousness, this turn also notices the importance of social aspects, transformation and critical development (Diprose, 2002; Meskimmon, 2011).   This study is mainly concerned with the question of how we can theorize, and play with the challenging difference between a performance that one has actually experienced, intellectually as well as physically, and a performance that is accessible only through traces and fragments. I raise this question both as an art history scholar and as a former professional classical and contemporary dancer. This means that I make use of my own experiences from the theatre – an approach that does not detract from the requirements of critical thinking and accuracy in scholarly research.
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spelling doaj.art-37d0fcc98d7848dd9954e34317c2ea7f2024-02-02T07:24:27ZengSeptentrio Academic PublishingNordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur0809-16681503-20862015-02-013410.7557/13.33793147Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic actionAstrid von Rosen0Department of Cultural Sciences (KUV), University of GothenburgThe present article addresses the rather complex notion of scenography in relation to historical research. Two performances of Henrik Ibsens’s Peer Gynt are presented as case studies with the aim of stimulating scenographic analyses of historical material. This approach does not dismiss the importance of the dramatic text, or the actors, or the various contexts in which the performances take place. On the contrary, I strongly believe that one always has to account for the multifarious complexity of a theatrical event. However, my research is guided by an interest in exploring ways of accessing long-past practices, forms and events, rather than relying on the assumption that one recovers something stable and fixed. What I claim is very simple: much more reliable knowledge can be produced by exploring, and working with traces from past events and theatrical processes. This approach can be associated with a current trend in theatre studies, in which “historical research has once more come to the fore” (Tessing Schneider & Skjoldager-Nielsen, 2011, 5) as well as an ethic of “being-with” the objects of investigation found in artistic research (e.g. Hannula 2008). On a general level, my approach can be associated with the affective turn in the humanities. Acknowledging corporeality, materiality and sensuousness, this turn also notices the importance of social aspects, transformation and critical development (Diprose, 2002; Meskimmon, 2011).   This study is mainly concerned with the question of how we can theorize, and play with the challenging difference between a performance that one has actually experienced, intellectually as well as physically, and a performance that is accessible only through traces and fragments. I raise this question both as an art history scholar and as a former professional classical and contemporary dancer. This means that I make use of my own experiences from the theatre – an approach that does not detract from the requirements of critical thinking and accuracy in scholarly research.https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3379
spellingShingle Astrid von Rosen
Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
Nordlit: Tidsskrift i litteratur og kultur
title Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
title_full Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
title_fullStr Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
title_full_unstemmed Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
title_short Sweating with Peer Gynt. Performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
title_sort sweating with peer gynt performative exchange as a way of accessing scenographic action
url https://septentrio.uit.no/index.php/nordlit/article/view/3379
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