菲利斯·纳吉的《长街》中人脸剧场的空间美学

A. El-Sawy
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引用次数: 0

摘要

20世纪90年代的英国戏剧见证了新一代愤怒的年轻一代的崛起,他们的作品被贴上了挑衅性、思辨性、对抗性、耸人听闻、令人震惊、打破禁忌、残酷、凄凉、阴郁和黑暗的标签。这些作家有当代的声音,追求“年岁”体验戏剧的美学,对经典的精心制作的戏剧和最近的文学传统发起了反抗。在那些为20世纪90年代的政治戏剧做出贡献的作家中,菲利斯·纳吉(Phyllis Nagy)是最有影响力的人物之一,她为体验式戏剧提供了令人震惊的形象。本文试图通过分析纳吉对空间和非线性情节结构的处理,来探讨她在《长条街》中的年面美学。Nagy在压抑的世界中创造了孤立的角色,面对这种看似不可战胜的压迫,她的角色分享了一种传统的空间和时间观念所无法包含的联系。纳吉扭曲了物理空间的规则,让观众对传统的角色关系有了一种新的、异化的视角。在这样做的过程中,她让观众很难理解为什么舞台上的事情正在发生。相反,《长街》给观众留下了一些关于生活和社会的清晰印象。因此,本文试图探索菲利斯·纳吉的《长街》,并证明她通过不熟悉的非线性情节结构在舞台上创造了压抑的世界,并通过舞台虚构空间的扭曲将孤立的人物联系起来。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Space Aesthetics of In-Yer-Face Theatre in Phyllis Nagy's The Strip
British theatre of the 1990s has witnessed the rise of a new angry young generation whose works have been labeled provocative, speculative, confrontational, sensational, shocking, taboo-breaking, brutal, bleak, gloomy and dark. These writers have a contemporary voice and pursue the aesthetics of 'In-yer-face' experiential theatre which launches rebellion against the classic well-made play, and against more recent literary traditions. Of those writers, contributing to (a)political drama in the 1990s, Phyllis Nagy emerged as one of the most influential figures, providing an experiential theatre with deeply shocking images. This paper is an attempt to explore the in-yer-face aesthetics in Nagy's The Strip by examining her manipulation of space and non-linear plot structures. Nagy creates isolated characters within oppressive worlds, and in the face of this seemingly undefeatable oppression, her characters share a bond that cannot be contained by traditional notions of space and time. Nagy bent the rules of physical space to give the audience a new and alienated perspective on traditional character relationships. In doing this, she makes it very difficult for an audience member to understand why the things on stage are happening. The Strip instead leaves audience members with a few clear impressions about life and society. Thus, this paper is an attempt to explore Phyllis Nagy's The Strip, and prove that she creates oppressive worlds onstage through unfamiliar, non-linear plot structures and that she connects the isolated characters through the distortion of onstage fictional space.
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