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LIVRES

Costume in performance : materiality, culture, and the body

Barbieri, Donatella
Londres, Angleterre : Bloomsbury Academic an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2017

This beautifully illustrated book conveys the centrality of costume to live performance. Finding associations between contemporary practices and historical manifestations, costume is explored in six thematic chapters, examining the transformative ritual of costuming; choruses as reflective of society; the grotesque, transgressive costume; the female sublime as emancipation; costume as sculptural art in motion; and the here-and-now as history.

Viewing the material costume as a crucial aspect in the preparation, presentation and reception of live performance, the book brings together costumed performances through history. These range from ancient Greece to modern experimental productions, from medieval theatre to modernist dance, from the 'fashion plays' to contemporary Shakespeare, marking developments in both culture and performance.

Revealing the relationship between dress, the body and human existence, and acknowledging a global as well as an Anglo and Eurocentric perspective, this book shows costume's ability to cross both geographical and disciplinary borders. Through it, we come to question the extent to which the material costume actually co-authors the performance itself, speaking of embodied histories, states of being and never-before imagined futures, which come to life in the temporary space of the performance. [editor summary]
This beautifully illustrated book conveys the centrality of costume to live performance. Finding associations between contemporary practices and historical manifestations, costume is explored in six thematic chapters, examining the transformative ritual of costuming; choruses as reflective of society; the grotesque, transgressive costume; the female sublime as emancipation; costume as sculptural art in motion; and the here-and-now as history. ...


Cote : 792.026 B236c 2017

  • Ex. 1 — disponible
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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

Costume as a technology for flight

Barbieri, Donatella
2017


Cote : 792.026 B236c 2017

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

Flying technology, the beautiful pedestal, and costume

Barbieri, Donatella
2017


Cote : 792.026 B236c 2017

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

The existential clown

Barbieri, Donatella
2017


Cote : 792.026 B236c 2017

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ARTICLES DE LIVRES

The reinvention of the English clown

Barbieri, Donatella
2017


Cote : 792.026 B236c 2017

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MEMOIRES ET THESES

Reading feminism, new materialism and post-colonial thought through costume in performance : materiality, culture and the body

Barbieri, Donatella
2022

This PhD by Publication enables the advancement of the research methodologies and theoretical positions that underpin the development of Costume in Performance: Materiality, Culture and the Body, a book that critically explores potentialities of agency through the ways in which costume, itself, performs. Drawn from selected and interconnected past and contemporary costume-led performances, this thesis addresses how these may account for the capacity to both empower and oppress, focusing on contexts of colonialism and neocolonialism. Engaging in a wider and ongoing process of decolonising of the subject, it brings to bear key transdisciplinary theoretical advances that enable expanding beyond the ideas set out in the book to articulate intersecting ethical entanglements, while building on the implicit feminist, post-colonial position taken by it. In this process it considers costuming as a phenomenon that is critical, active, situated, material, temporal, spatial, in motion and embodied. Placing costume within post-humanist ontologies, I intend to make it an object of feminist, new materialist knowledge, that furthers thinking around performance as much as addresses social and environmental concerns, while offering a myriad of creative possibilities for future ethical interdisciplinary research, practice and pedagogy.
This PhD by Publication enables the advancement of the research methodologies and theoretical positions that underpin the development of Costume in Performance: Materiality, Culture and the Body, a book that critically explores potentialities of agency through the ways in which costume, itself, performs. Drawn from selected and interconnected past and contemporary costume-led performances, this thesis addresses how these may account for the ...

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ARTICLES DE PERIODIQUES

Performativity and the historical body : detecting performance through the archived costume

Barbieri, Donatella
Studies in Theatre & Performance vol. 33 no. 3, p. 281-301, 2013

This article locates costume, an almost non-existent area of theatre studies scholarship, at the centre of enquiry as a new perspective from which historical performance can be viewed. Focusing on Victorian clown costume, it case studies the jacket worn by Charlie Keith (1836–1895). It proposes that purely text-based historiography overlooks the material costume, shaped by the performance context, and that arguably shapes the performance itself. This article proposes a methodology of enquiry based on analysing costume as a material, performative object, to begin to define the history of its own discipline away from the margins it currently occupies. Its aesthetics materialize through performance within a socio-political, economical and cultural context. Recognizably codified in elements of design, these embodied aesthetics mediate the interface between performer and audience. Through this, the persistence of certain genealogies of ideas embodied in costume is revealed as implicitly instrumental in the survival of specific performance practices.
This article locates costume, an almost non-existent area of theatre studies scholarship, at the centre of enquiry as a new perspective from which historical performance can be viewed. Focusing on Victorian clown costume, it case studies the jacket worn by Charlie Keith (1836–1895). It proposes that purely text-based historiography overlooks the material costume, shaped by the performance context, and that arguably shapes the performance itself. ...

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