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178420

(2019) Performance phenomenology, Dordrecht, Springer.

Acting without "meaning' or "motivation"

a first-person account of acting in the pre-articulate world of immediate lived/living experience

Phillip B. Zarrilli

pp. 287-309

Oscillating between being "within' and "without' a performative experience, Phillip Zarrilli's chapter details the ways in which performance, as necessarily embodied and perceived, makes manifest some of the better-known tenets of phenomenological thinking. In particular, he illuminates the way in which a performance event underscores the prevalence of the bodymind (as per Merleau-Ponty), and even more explicitly (through his key example of Beckett's Act Without Words I), a Heideggerian "thrownness'. The chapter further touches upon many of the key phenomenological tropes that are highlighted early and often in the book, especially a desire to be precise and rigorous in terms of articulating what phenomenology is and what it does, specifically with respect to the study of theatre and performance.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-319-98059-1_14

Full citation:

Zarrilli, P. B. (2019)., Acting without "meaning' or "motivation": a first-person account of acting in the pre-articulate world of immediate lived/living experience, in S. Grant, J. Mcneilly-Renaudie & M. Wagner (eds.), Performance phenomenology, Dordrecht, Springer, pp. 287-309.

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