Tagungen > Tagungsprogramm

19.11.2013

Dramatic Experience: Poetics of Drama and the Public Sphere(s) in Early Modern Europe and Beyond

  • Ort: Freie Universität Berlin, Seminarzentrum, L116, Habelschwerdter Allee 45, 14195 Berlin-Dahlem
  • Beginn: 28.11.13
  • Ende: 29.11.13
  • Disziplinen: Literaturwissenschaft, Medien-/Kulturwissenschaft
  • Sprachen: Sprachenübergreifend

From Aristotle to New Historicism, drama has been recognized as a medium tailored to produce and manipulate collective emotions, whether anthropologically constant or socially and historically variable. This conference is designed to investigate different approaches and venues of research open to students of early modern drama, departing from this understanding of drama. Bringing together experts on Western European cultures, as well as scholars working on Russia, East Asia and Northern Africa, we intend to explore the interaction between “universal”, internationally transferable theatrical poetics, textual genres and performative techniques, and specific audiences, diverging socially, geographically and chronologically. Reaching beyond theater studies per se, this perspective will allow us to address the complex structure of various early modern “public spheres”, from the court society to various forms of lower class sociability, as well as the issue of public emotionality and its place in cultural history: the differences and similarities in form and function between theater and ritual, the importance of theatrical practices for pre-modern social and political order, the tensions between public and private, social and aesthetic sensibilities.

 

CONFERENCE PROGRAMME

 

Thursday, 28 November 2013

 

9:30 – 10:00 Arrival and registration

 

10:00 – 10:15 Introduction and welcome by JOACHIM KÜPPER (Freie Universität Berlin)

 

Panel 1: Theatre and the City

 

10:15 – 11:00 WENDY HELLER (Princeton University)

l favore degli dei: Myth, Spectacle, and Ovidian Dramaturgy in Seicento Opera

 

11:00 – 11:45 TATIANA KORNEEVA (Freie Universität Berlin/DramaNet)

Theatrical Spells: Techniques of Enticement in Eighteenth-Century Italian Fairy Comedy

 

11:45 – 12:00 Coffee break

 

12.00 – 12.45 NIGEL SMITH (Princeton University)

Theatre, Aesthetics and Political Crisis in the Seventeenth Century: Amsterdam in Context

 

12.45 – 14.15 Lunch break

 

Panel 2: Theatrical Effects

 

14:15 – 15:00 PETER W. MARX (Universität Köln)

How to create a Scene? Early Modern Drama and Theatre between Literary Practice, Cultural Performances and the Emerging Theatrical Arts

 

15:00 – 15:45 HANS RUDOLF VELTEN (Universität Siegen)

Devils on and off Stage: Shifting Effects of Fear and Laughter in Late Medieval German Religious Theater

 

15:45 – 16:30 PHILIP SADGROVE (University of Manchester)

Audience/Dramatist Interaction on the Early Arabic Stage

 

16:30 – 16:45 Coffee break

 

Panel 3: Scenarios of Power

 

16:45 – 17:30 CLAUDE HAAS (Zentrum für Literatur- und Kulturforschung Berlin)

The Public of the Sovereign and the Private Sphere of Mourning: Pierre Corneille’s Horace (1640)

 

17:30 – 18:15 KIRILL OSPOVAT (Freie Universität Berlin/DramaNet)

Terror and Pity: Hamlet and the Poetics of Autocracy in Eighteenth-Century Russia

 

18:15 – 19:00 HEINRICH KIRSCHBAUM (Humboldt Universität Berlin)

Self-Burial and the Mystery of Rising: Perlocutionary Eschatology in Polish Romantic Drama

 

 

Friday, 29 November 2013

 

Panel 4: Theatre and the Academies

 

10:00 – 10:45 KATJA GVOZDEVA (Freie Universität Berlin/DramaNet)

Why Do Men Go Blind in the Theatre? Gendering the Audience in Italian Renaissance Comedies

 

10:45 – 11:30 DÉBORAH BLOCKER (University of California, Berkeley)

From Sacred Music to Courtly Pleasures: Defining the Melodramatic Experience in Jacopo Peri’s and Ottavio Rinuccini’s Euridice (1600)

 

11:30 – 11.45 Coffee break

 

11:45 – 12:30 SVEN THORSTEN KILIAN (Freie Universität Berlin/DramaNet)

Opening Spaces for the Reading Audience: Fernando de Roja’s Celestina (1499/1502) and Niccolò Machiavelli’s Mandragola (1519)

 

12:30 – 14:00 Lunch break

 

Panel 5: Noh and its Echoes

 

14:00 – 14:45 STANCA SCHOLZ-CIONCA (Universität Trier)

Noh Theatre Within Walls and Beyond in Early Modern Japan (1603-1868)

 

14:45 – 15.30 CARRIE J. PRESTON (Boston University)

Noh Echoes, No Conductor: Benjamin Britten’s Curlew River

and the Measures of Intercultural Performance

 

15:30 – 15.45 Coffee break

 

Panel 6: Theatre and Social Knowledge

 

15:45 – 16:30 TONI BERNHART (Freie Universität Berlin/DramaNet)

Imaging the Audience in the Eighteenth-Century Austrian Popular Drama

 

16:30 – 17:15 ALEXEI EVSTRATOV (University of Oxford)

Molière and Performing the Bourgeois: Theatrical Experience and Social Knowledge in the Eighteenth Century

 

17:15 – 17:30 Coffee break

 

17:30 – 18:15 LOGAN JAMES CONNORS (Bucknell University)

From Contagion to Cognition: Aestheticizing the Theatrical Event in Eighteenth-Century France

 

18:15 – 19:00 Final Discussion

 

Further details about the conference can be found at the following link

www.geisteswissenschaften.fu-berlin.de/we03/forschung/drittmittelprojekte/dramanet/Veranstaltungen/2013/index.html

 

For more information on the event, please contact dramanet2013@zedat.fu-berlin.de.

 

Von:  Tatiana Korneeva

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