Spectral Characters: Genre and Materiality on the Modern Stage

Julia Jarcho
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Abstract

Sarah Balkin’s Spectral Characters: Genre and Materiality on the Modern Stage is a noteworthy addition to works emphasizing ghostliness, material presence, and genre connections between nineteenth-century melodrama and the modern dramatic repertory. The book follows along similar lines as Marvin Carlson’s The Haunted Stage, Alice Rayner’s Ghosts: Death’s Double and the Phenomena of Theatre, Andrew Sofer’s Dark Matter: Invisibility in Drama, Theater, and Performance, and other books partaking in issues related to ipseity—how dramatic characters are susceptible to other people, the haunted past, and material things onstage—and also explores the reconfiguration of identity as it pertains to language and genre formation. Balkin analyzes the “apparent deadness of characters whose selves are made of other people, whose thoughts become exteriorized communication technologies, and whose bodies merge with walls and furniture” (3). As a consequence, the qualities of dramatic characters “mark a new relationship between the material and the imaginary in modern theater” (3). Balkin’s introductory chapter explores the rise of Gothic melodrama and the occult during the late nineteenth century. Scenography and dramaturgy in notable plays such as J. R. Planché’s The Vampire, Dion Boucicault’s The Corsican Brothers, and Leopold David Lewis’s The Bells influenced the three luminaries of modern drama: Ibsen, Wilde, Strindberg. These nineteenth-century plays and their stage technology, Balkin contends, “make visible what we might call the ‘material occult,’ a concept that emphasizes the materiality of supernatural and imaginary forces on the modern stage” (16). Balkin’s next four chapters examine those three playwrights (especially Strindberg), concluding with a final chapter on Jean Genet, Arthur Kopit, and Samuel Beckett—dramatists representing late modernist authors who “reinforce continuities among realism and modernism via shared bodies, dead matter, and generic hauntings” (25).
光谱特征:现代舞台上的体裁与物质性
莎拉·巴尔金的《幽灵人物:现代舞台上的类型和物质性》是一部值得注意的作品,它强调了19世纪情节剧和现代戏剧剧目之间的幽灵、物质存在和类型联系。这本书遵循了马文·卡尔森的《幽灵舞台》、爱丽丝·雷纳的《幽灵:死亡的双重和戏剧现象》、安德鲁·索弗的《暗物质:戏剧、戏剧和表演中的隐形》以及其他一些书的类似路线——戏剧人物如何容易受到其他人、萦绕的过去和舞台上物质事物的影响——并探讨了与语言和类型形成相关的身份重构。巴尔金分析了“角色的明显死亡,他们的自我是由其他人构成的,他们的思想成为了外在的交流技术,他们的身体与墙壁和家具融合在一起”(3)。因此,戏剧角色的品质“标志着现代戏剧中物质与想象之间的新关系”(3)。巴尔金的前言探讨了19世纪后期哥特式情节剧和神秘学的兴起。著名戏剧如j.r. planch的《吸血鬼》、迪翁·布西柯的《科西嘉兄弟》和利奥波德·大卫·刘易斯的《钟声》的舞台布景和戏剧技巧影响了现代戏剧的三位杰出人物:易卜生、王尔德和斯特林堡。巴尔金认为,这些19世纪的戏剧及其舞台技术“使我们可以称之为‘物质玄学’的东西变得可见,这是一个强调现代舞台上超自然和想象力量的物质性的概念”(16)。巴尔金接下来的四章考察了这三位剧作家(尤其是斯特林堡),最后一章总结了让·热内、阿瑟·科皮特和塞缪尔·贝克特——这些剧作家代表了晚期现代主义作家,他们“通过共享的身体、死亡物质和普遍的鬼魂来加强现实主义和现代主义之间的连续性”(25)。
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