失落剧院的视觉化:虚拟实践与表演空间的恢复》,作者 Joanne Tompkins(评论)

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
Sarah Bay-Cheng
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Even prior to widespread digital tools, theatre historians drew on communication technologies—photography, radio, film, video—to capture, analyze, replay, and convey past performances. Each technological advance added new dimensions to the multisensory experience of performance, including sound and movement captured in increasing detail and scope. Resources such as Theatre on Film and Tape Archive at the New York Public Library, theatre documentaries circulating on VHS, or a variety of bootlegs illicitly copied and recopied for theatre history classes added to the formal and informal networks of theatre history recordings. With the advent of digital recordings, the internet, and virtual environments, both the documentation and scholarship circulated more broadly.</p> <p>Yet, even as theatre recordings proliferated throughout the twentieth century, the discourse around them focused primarily on their lack of fidelity to the original performances. 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Published in 2021, Miguel Escobar Varela’s <em>Theater as Data: Computational Journeys into Theater Research</em> provides an excellent overview with detailed explanations of this emerging field’s best practices. Drawing on both his own work and others’, Varela documents how researchers integrate digital methods and technologies into the study of theatrical performance.</p> <p>The coauthored book <em>Visualising Lost Theatres</em> joins these projects and publications as a cogent example of how such methods advance our understanding of the theatrical past through detailed case studies that bring theoretical inquiries to bear on specific projects. The book emerges from the authors’ respective and collaborative research areas, and in conjunction with the development of the VR environment Ortelia, it demonstrates how historians and audiences can digitally reconstruct and, importantly, reexperience theatrical spaces such as the Rose Theatre in the UK and other cultural heritage sites. Three of the book’s coauthors—Julie Holledge, Jonathan Bollen, and Joanne Tompkins—have previously collaborated on digital humanities projects, including <em>A Global Doll’s House: Ibsen and Distant Visions</em> (2016) with Frode Helland. Tompkins has led the development of the virtual environment Ortelia for more than a decade (cf. Tompkins and Delbridge, Electronic Visualisation and the Arts, 2009), including its development for a range of gallery and cultural environments.</p> <p><em>Visualizing Lost Theatres</em> details both theoretical and practical approaches to virtual reality (VR) reconstructions as reenactments and speculative reimaginings of historical theatre spaces. The authors detail how the virtual environment of a specific theatre can not only facilitate a deeper and more <strong>[End Page 115]</strong> nuanced understanding of the past but also cultivate new performances through motion capture and the participation of “actor-researchers” working within the virtual models. The experience of the past and its imaginative re-creation provide historical insights into both the actions onstage and possible reactions among audiences. The book’s multimodal scholarship echoes the dynamism of performance, affording historians and their audiences new perspectives within historical models and contexts.</p> <p><em>Visualising Lost Theatres</em> is simply and intuitively structured, opening with a clear and compelling introduction to the ideas, history, and practices detailed within it, followed by case studies and a brief conclusion. 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Resources such as Theatre on Film and Tape Archive at the New York Public Library, theatre documentaries circulating on VHS, or a variety of bootlegs illicitly copied and recopied for theatre history classes added to the formal and informal networks of theatre history recordings. With the advent of digital recordings, the internet, and virtual environments, both the documentation and scholarship circulated more broadly.</p> <p>Yet, even as theatre recordings proliferated throughout the twentieth century, the discourse around them focused primarily on their lack of fidelity to the original performances. In the early 2000s, this emphasis began to change as scholarly narratives drew attention to the role that performance recordings and reenactments play as evidence in historical theatre narratives. Books ranging from Diana Taylor’s <em>The Archive and the Repertoire: Performing Cultural Memory in the Americas</em> (2003) to Toni Sant’s <em>Documenting Performance: The Context and Processes of Digital Curation and Archiving</em> (2017) explore how digital technologies create different kinds of performance records. The last ten years have seen the most significant shifts, as theatre scholars engaged the digital humanities to create resources beyond the printed book in digital projects such as Jennifer Roberts-Smith’s Simulated Environment for Theatre (SET) and the Comédie-Française Registers Project (CFRP), among others. Published in 2021, Miguel Escobar Varela’s <em>Theater as Data: Computational Journeys into Theater Research</em> provides an excellent overview with detailed explanations of this emerging field’s best practices. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 失落剧院的可视化:乔安妮-汤普金斯(Joanne Tompkins)著,萨拉-贝-郑(Sarah Bay-Cheng VISUALISING LOST THEATRES:虚拟实践与表演空间的恢复》。作者:Joanne Tompkins、Julie Holledge、Jonathan Bollen 和 Liyang Xia。剑桥现代戏剧研究》。剑桥:剑桥大学出版社,2022 年;第 211 页。在过去的二十年里,随着学者们在印刷文本之外进行研究、分析和出版,与数字人文学科相关的实践在戏剧和表演研究中变得越来越普遍。甚至在数字工具普及之前,戏剧史学家们就利用通讯技术--摄影、广播、电影、视频--来捕捉、分析、重播和传达过去的表演。每一次技术进步都为多感官的表演体验增添了新的维度,包括声音和动作的捕捉,其细节和范围都在不断扩大。纽约公共图书馆的 "电影和磁带戏剧档案"、VHS 格式的戏剧纪录片,以及为戏剧史课程非法复制和翻拍的各种盗版制品等资源,都为正式和非正式的戏剧史录音网络增添了新的内容。随着数字录音、互联网和虚拟环境的出现,文献和学术研究都得到了更广泛的传播。然而,即使戏剧录音在整个 20 世纪大量涌现,围绕它们的讨论也主要集中在它们缺乏对原始演出的忠实性上。21 世纪初,随着学术叙事开始关注表演录音和重现在历史戏剧叙事中作为证据的作用,这一重点开始发生变化。从戴安娜-泰勒(Diana Taylor)的《档案与剧目:美洲的文化记忆表演》(The Archive and the Repertoire: Performing Cultural Memory in the Americas,2003 年)到托尼-桑特(Toni Sant)的《记录表演》(Documenting Performance:The Context and Processes of Digital Curation and Archiving》(2017 年)等书籍都探讨了数字技术如何创造出不同类型的表演记录。近十年来,戏剧学者参与数字人文学科,在珍妮弗-罗伯茨-史密斯(Jennifer Roberts-Smith)的 "戏剧模拟环境"(SET)和 "法兰西喜剧院登记簿项目"(CFRP)等数字项目中创造印刷书籍以外的资源,这些转变最为显著。米格尔-埃斯科瓦尔-瓦雷拉的《作为数据的戏剧》于 2021 年出版:对这一新兴领域的最佳实践进行了详细说明。瓦雷拉根据自己和他人的研究成果,记录了研究人员如何将数字方法和技术融入戏剧表演研究。他们合著的《失落剧场的可视化》(Visualising Lost Theatres)一书将这些项目和出版物结合在一起,通过详细的案例研究,将理论研究与具体项目相结合,有力地说明了这些方法如何促进我们对过去戏剧的理解。本书源于作者各自的合作研究领域,结合虚拟现实环境 Ortelia 的开发,展示了历史学家和观众如何以数字方式重建,更重要的是,重新体验戏剧空间,如英国玫瑰剧院和其他文化遗址。本书的三位合著者--朱莉-霍利奇(Julie Holledge)、乔纳森-博伦(Jonathan Bollen)和乔安妮-汤普金斯(Joanne Tompkins)--曾合作开展过数字人文项目,包括《全球玩偶之家》(A Global Doll's House):易卜生与遥远的愿景》(2016 年)。十多年来,汤普金斯一直领导着虚拟环境 Ortelia 的开发工作(参见汤普金斯和德尔布里奇,《电子可视化与艺术》,2009 年),包括为一系列画廊和文化环境进行的开发工作。失落剧院的可视化》详细介绍了虚拟现实(VR)重建作为历史剧院空间的重现和推测性再想象的理论和实践方法。作者详细介绍了特定剧院的虚拟环境不仅可以促进对过去更深入、更 [第 115 页结束] 细致入微的了解,还可以通过动作捕捉和在虚拟模型中工作的 "演员-研究者 "的参与来培养新的表演。对过去的体验及其想象力的再创造为舞台上的行为和观众可能的反应提供了历史性的见解。本书的多模态学术研究与表演的活力相呼应,为历史学家及其观众在历史模型和历史背景下提供了新的视角。失落剧场的可视化》结构简单直观,开篇以清晰有力的导言介绍了书中详述的观点、历史和实践,随后是案例研究和简短的结论。五个案例...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Visualising Lost Theatres: Virtual Praxis and the Recovery of Performance Spaces by Joanne Tompkins (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Visualising Lost Theatres: Virtual Praxis and the Recovery of Performance Spaces by Joanne Tompkins
  • Sarah Bay-Cheng
VISUALISING LOST THEATRES: VIRTUAL PRAXIS AND THE RECOVERY OF PERFORMANCE SPACES. By Joanne Tompkins, Julie Holledge, Jonathan Bollen, and Liyang Xia. Cambridge Studies in Modern Theatre. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2022; pp. 211.

Over the past twenty years, practices associated with the digital humanities have become more common in theatre and performance studies, as scholars engaged modes of research, analysis, and publication beyond the printed text. Even prior to widespread digital tools, theatre historians drew on communication technologies—photography, radio, film, video—to capture, analyze, replay, and convey past performances. Each technological advance added new dimensions to the multisensory experience of performance, including sound and movement captured in increasing detail and scope. Resources such as Theatre on Film and Tape Archive at the New York Public Library, theatre documentaries circulating on VHS, or a variety of bootlegs illicitly copied and recopied for theatre history classes added to the formal and informal networks of theatre history recordings. With the advent of digital recordings, the internet, and virtual environments, both the documentation and scholarship circulated more broadly.

Yet, even as theatre recordings proliferated throughout the twentieth century, the discourse around them focused primarily on their lack of fidelity to the original performances. In the early 2000s, this emphasis began to change as scholarly narratives drew attention to the role that performance recordings and reenactments play as evidence in historical theatre narratives. Books ranging from Diana Taylor’s The Archive and the Repertoire: Performing Cultural Memory in the Americas (2003) to Toni Sant’s Documenting Performance: The Context and Processes of Digital Curation and Archiving (2017) explore how digital technologies create different kinds of performance records. The last ten years have seen the most significant shifts, as theatre scholars engaged the digital humanities to create resources beyond the printed book in digital projects such as Jennifer Roberts-Smith’s Simulated Environment for Theatre (SET) and the Comédie-Française Registers Project (CFRP), among others. Published in 2021, Miguel Escobar Varela’s Theater as Data: Computational Journeys into Theater Research provides an excellent overview with detailed explanations of this emerging field’s best practices. Drawing on both his own work and others’, Varela documents how researchers integrate digital methods and technologies into the study of theatrical performance.

The coauthored book Visualising Lost Theatres joins these projects and publications as a cogent example of how such methods advance our understanding of the theatrical past through detailed case studies that bring theoretical inquiries to bear on specific projects. The book emerges from the authors’ respective and collaborative research areas, and in conjunction with the development of the VR environment Ortelia, it demonstrates how historians and audiences can digitally reconstruct and, importantly, reexperience theatrical spaces such as the Rose Theatre in the UK and other cultural heritage sites. Three of the book’s coauthors—Julie Holledge, Jonathan Bollen, and Joanne Tompkins—have previously collaborated on digital humanities projects, including A Global Doll’s House: Ibsen and Distant Visions (2016) with Frode Helland. Tompkins has led the development of the virtual environment Ortelia for more than a decade (cf. Tompkins and Delbridge, Electronic Visualisation and the Arts, 2009), including its development for a range of gallery and cultural environments.

Visualizing Lost Theatres details both theoretical and practical approaches to virtual reality (VR) reconstructions as reenactments and speculative reimaginings of historical theatre spaces. The authors detail how the virtual environment of a specific theatre can not only facilitate a deeper and more [End Page 115] nuanced understanding of the past but also cultivate new performances through motion capture and the participation of “actor-researchers” working within the virtual models. The experience of the past and its imaginative re-creation provide historical insights into both the actions onstage and possible reactions among audiences. The book’s multimodal scholarship echoes the dynamism of performance, affording historians and their audiences new perspectives within historical models and contexts.

Visualising Lost Theatres is simply and intuitively structured, opening with a clear and compelling introduction to the ideas, history, and practices detailed within it, followed by case studies and a brief conclusion. The five case...

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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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