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New Directions in Theatre Studies (ENGL40029)
HonoursPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability | Semester 2 |
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Fees | Look up fees |
In this subject students will discover new paradigms in theatre and performance studies, guided by an expert in the field. At theatre’s core is an encounter between a performance and an audience. Recent scholarship on audiences and spectatorship rejects the binary of active doing and passive viewing, instead understanding audiences as performers with their own conventions and behaviours: applause, laughter, heckling, hissing, or throwing fruit, to name a few. Students will learn how these conventions shift across historical periods, contexts, and genres. They will examine idealisations and assumptions about spectatorship in seminal theories of performance and aesthetics and will evaluate the limitations and affordances of more empirical, data-driven approaches to studying audiences. Students will apply these ideas to live performance events as well as archival evidence. As part of this subject students will also consider audience as an aspect of writing, learning to position themselves as viewers, participants, and scholars.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Identify and analyse recent critical paradigms in theatre studies
- Recognise how these paradigms have emerged in particular historical and critical contexts
- Apply theoretical ideas to archival and live examples of performance
- Produce written and oral arguments about performance
- Communicate effectively in a team and individually.
Generic skills
- Prepare and present their ideas verbally and in writing to an advanced level and in conformity to conventions of academic presentation
- Participate in discussion and group activities and be sensitive to the participation of others
- Apply creative and critical thinking in the analysis of artistic and scholarly works
- Manage time effectively in the completion of assessment tasks.
Last updated: 8 November 2024