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dc.contributor.authorMcNeilly, Jodie
dc.date.accessioned2013-11-06
dc.date.available2013-11-06
dc.date.issued2012-01-01
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/2123/9526
dc.description.abstractThis study examines the provocative claim by Performance Studies theorist Philip Auslander (1999) that there is no ontological distinction between live and mediatised forms because they participate in the same cultural economy. This claim has led to something of a stagnation of debate between, on the one hand, scholars who privilege the live over the mediatised and on the other those who extinguish the live in favour of mediatisation. Moving beyond the limitations of ontology, this project proposes and develops a phenomenological aesthetics in order to investigate the essential structures and modes of experienced phenomena from within audience. The phenomenological approach understands the complexity and dynamism of the relationship between bodies and technologies in performance, reorienting the investigation away from a rehearsal of established and unhelpful ontological positions. The methodology for the project draws primarily upon methods from the N orth-American tradition of practical phenomenology (Herbert Spiegelberg, Edward S. Casey, Don Ihde, and Anthony Steinbock), and the transcendental philosophy of Edmund Husserl. Through a series of specially designed workshops, in which audience participants are trained in phenomenological techniques of bracketing and attention, A Poetics of Reception tests the potential of practical phenomenology to break the ontological impasse set up by Auslander. The method elicits the grasping of experiences of embodiment, kinesthetic empathy, temporality, orientation, imagination and poetic language. Participants were trained and required to write their experiences of the interaction between bodies and performance technologies, creating texts that then underwent hermeneutic analysis. The results of this interpretation yielded six interactive encounters, and revealed the constituted structures and modes of the relational phenomena experienced in performance by the participants. This study’s methodology has both practical and philoso! phical i mplications, including its proposed use as an audience-based dramaturgy for digital performance, and a method of inquiry into the kinesthetic dimensions of aesthetic experiencesen
dc.rightsThe author retains copyright of this thesis
dc.subjectphenomenologyen
dc.subjectaestheticsen
dc.subjecttechnologyen
dc.subjectdanceen
dc.subjectperformanceen
dc.titlePoetics of Reception: a phenomenological aesthetics of bodies and technology in performanceen
dc.typeThesisen
dc.date.valid2013-01-01en
dc.type.thesisDoctor of Philosophyen
usyd.facultyFaculty of Artsen
usyd.departmentDepartment of Performance Studiesen
usyd.degreeDoctor of Philosophy Ph.D.en
usyd.awardinginstThe University of Sydneyen


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