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- aggregation classification "A1".
- aggregation creator person.
- aggregation date "2010".
- aggregation format "application/pdf".
- aggregation hasFormat 1089825.bibtex.
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- aggregation isPartOf urn:issn:1048-6801.
- aggregation language "eng".
- aggregation rights "I have transferred the copyright for this publication to the publisher".
- aggregation subject "Arts and Architecture".
- aggregation title "Something is rotten on the stage of Flanders: postdramatic Shakespeare in contemporary Flemish theatre".
- aggregation abstract "The diverse afterlives of Shakespeare's tragedies often disclose particular artistic visions within a changing theatre landscape. This article explores how contemporary Flemish adaptations reflect a changing understanding of the 'tragic' that signals the emergence of a postdramatic theatre aesthetic. In particular, productions by Jan Decorte, whose Hamlet shocked the Brussels audience in 1978, Jan Lauwers' Shakespeare-cycle, created with his Needcompany in the 1990s, and Peter Verhelst's two poetic adaptations of Romeo and Juliet (1998 and 1999) will be discussed. I shall argue that in these wayward versions, Shakespeare's text is treated as Fremdkorper - as an impure, foreign body - in order to articulate a postdramatic vision of the vanity of action, of the unrepresentable notions of violence and death, and of the performative power of poetic language. The tragic heroes are no longer treated as traditional elevated characters where catharsis develops from a mimesis of pain, from an empathic identification with the hero. Here, instead, as Hans-Thies Lehmann observed in Postdramatic Theatre, borrowing a term from Adorno, a 'mimesis to pain' haunts the contemporary Flemish stage: we witness a 'transition from represented pain to pain experienced in representation' (p. 166, original emphasis [Routledge, 2006]).".
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- aggregation endPage "448".
- aggregation issue "4".
- aggregation startPage "437".
- aggregation volume "20".
- aggregation aggregates 1854598.
- aggregation isDescribedBy 1089825.
- aggregation similarTo 10486801.2010.505757.
- aggregation similarTo LU-1089825.