Performance in Theatre and Everyday Life: Cognitive, Neuronal, and Applied Aspects of Acting

Performance in Theatre and Everyday Life: Cognitive, Neuronal, and Applied Aspects of Acting
Title Performance in Theatre and Everyday Life: Cognitive, Neuronal, and Applied Aspects of Acting PDF eBook
Author Corinne Jola
Publisher Frontiers Media SA
Total Pages 115
Release 2021-09-30
Genre Science
ISBN 2889714306

Download Performance in Theatre and Everyday Life: Cognitive, Neuronal, and Applied Aspects of Acting Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences

An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences
Title An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences PDF eBook
Author John Lutterbie
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 208
Release 2019-09-05
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 147425683X

Download An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This is the first textbook designed for students, practitioners and scholars of the performing arts who are curious about the power of the cognitive sciences to throw light on the processes of performance. It equips readers with a clear understanding of how research in cognitive neuroscience has illuminated and expanded traditional approaches to thinking about topics such as the performer, the spectator, space and time, culture, and the text. Each chapter considers four layers of performance: conventional forms of theatre, performance art, and everyday life, offering an expansive vision of the impact of the cognitive sciences on performance in the widest sense. Written in an approachable style, An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences weaves together case studies of a wide range of performances with scientific evidence and post-structural theory. Artists such as Robert Wilson, Societas Raffaello Sanzio, Ariane Mnouchkine, Bertolt Brecht, and Antonin Artaud are brought into conversation with theories of Gilles Deleuze, Shaun Gallagher, Alva Noë, Tim Ingold and the science of V. S. Ramachandran, Vittorio Gallese, and Antonio Damasio. John Lutterbie offers a complex understanding of not only the act of performing but the forces that mark the place of theatre in contemporary society. In drawing on a variety of scientific articles, Lutterbie provides readers with an accessible account of significant research in areas in the field and reveals how the sciences can help us understand the experience of art.

Performance and Cognition

Performance and Cognition
Title Performance and Cognition PDF eBook
Author Bruce McConachie
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 254
Release 2006-10-16
Genre Art
ISBN 1135989478

Download Performance and Cognition Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

This book invites theatre and performance scholars to incorporate many of the insights of cognitive science into their work and to begin considering all of their research projects from the perspective of cognitive studies. As well as including a comprehensive introduction to the challenges of cognitive studies for theatre and performance scholarship, the volume features essays in all of the major areas of theatre and performance. Several of the contributions use cognitive studies to challenge some of the key scholarly and practical orientations in theatre and performance studies. The experimentally based insights of cognitive science are shown to be at odds with Saussurean semiotics, psychoanalysis, and aspects of deconstruction, new historicism, and Foucauldian discourse theory. Performance and Cognition opens up fresh perspectives on theatre studies – with applications for dramatic criticism, performance analysis, acting practice, audience response, theatre history, and other important areas –and sets the agenda for future work, helping to map the emergence of this new approach.

Theatre, Performance and Cognition

Theatre, Performance and Cognition
Title Theatre, Performance and Cognition PDF eBook
Author Rhonda Blair
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing
Total Pages 256
Release 2016-03-24
Genre Performing Arts
ISBN 1472591801

Download Theatre, Performance and Cognition Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Theatre, Performance and Cognition introduces readers to the key debates, areas of research, and applications of the cognitive sciences to the humanities, and to theatre and performance in particular. It features the most exciting work being done at the intersection of theatre and cognitive science, containing both selected scientific studies that have been influential in the field, each introduced and contextualised by the editors, together with related scholarship from the field of theatre and performance that demonstrates some of the applications of the cognitive sciences to actor training, the rehearsal room and the realm of performance more generally. The three sections consider the principal areas of research and application in this interdisciplinary field, starting with a focus on language and meaning-making in which Shakespeare's work and Tom Stoppard's Arcadia are considered. In the second part which focuses on the body, chapters consider applications for actor and dance training, while the third part focuses on dynamic ecologies, of which the body is a part.

Embodied Cognition, Acting and Performance

Embodied Cognition, Acting and Performance
Title Embodied Cognition, Acting and Performance PDF eBook
Author Experience Bryon
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 124
Release 2018-12-07
Genre Psychology
ISBN 1351169599

Download Embodied Cognition, Acting and Performance Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

In this collection of essays, the four branches of radical cognitive science—embodied, embedded, enactive and ecological—will dialogue with performance, with particular focus on post-cognitivist approaches to understanding the embodied mind-in-society; de-emphasising the computational and representational metaphors; and embracing new conceptualisations grounded on the dynamic interactions of "brain, body and world". In our collection, radical cognitive science reaches out to areas of scholarship also explored in the fields of performance practice and training as we facilitate a new inter- and transdisciplinary discourse in which to jointly share and explore common reactions of embodied approaches to the lived mind. The essays originally published as a special issue in Connection Science.

The Actor, Image, and Action

The Actor, Image, and Action
Title The Actor, Image, and Action PDF eBook
Author Rhonda Blair
Publisher Routledge
Total Pages 153
Release 2007-11-30
Genre Art
ISBN 1135976244

Download The Actor, Image, and Action Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

Rhonda Blair examines the physiological relationship between bodily action and emotional experience, in the first full-length study of actor training using the insights of cognitive neuroscience and their crucial importance to an actor’s engagement with a role.

An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences

An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences
Title An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences PDF eBook
Author John Harry Lutterbie
Publisher
Total Pages 198
Release
Genre Cognitive science
ISBN 9781474256841

Download An Introduction to Theatre, Performance and the Cognitive Sciences Book in PDF, Epub and Kindle

"This is the first textbook designed for students, practitioners, and scholars of the performing arts who are curious about the power of the cognitive sciences to throw light on the processes of performance, It equips readers with a clear understanding of how research in cognitive neuroscience has illuminated and expanded traditional approaches to thinking about topics such as the performer, the spectator, space and time, cultur, and the text. Each chapter considers three layers of performance: conventional forms of theatre, performance art, and everyday life, offering an expansive vision of the impact of the cognitive sciences on performance in the widest sense"--Publisher description.