体验Léotard的感性身体:英国舞台之上的风险、道德与快乐

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
Kate Holmes
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引用次数: 0

摘要

19世纪60年代初,人们对朱尔斯·莱奥塔尔创新的单人空中飞人表演的反应从愉悦和兴奋到引发与风险相关的不道德指控,这些指控在今天看来很奇怪。我利用报纸报道和图像研究了Léotard名人的风险、道德和快乐之间的关系,展示了他的名人如何揭示对身体态度的变化。观众对他的表演的评价取决于他们如何重视身体愉悦,以及他们如何将公民身份、宗教、科学和进步与运动联系起来。考虑到Léotard和走钢丝的人Charles Blondin展示了Léotar的表现和体格如何减轻人们对风险的担忧。要理解Léotard不熟悉的动作,通常需要处理相互矛盾的身体反应和相互矛盾的观点。”“危险”的表演引起了谴责,因为它们引发了这些令人困惑的经历以及与风险相关的观众胁迫和脱敏的担忧。在19世纪60年代,基于报纸报道和情感的“轰动”热潮中,Léotard辞职,表明了维多利亚人对身体的关注。社会中更广泛的风险和科学进步有助于解释维多利亚人在面对城市威胁时越来越关注身体健康的原因。在这种背景下,体验表演者所体现的替代风险使维多利亚人能够排练而不是避免维多利亚生活的刺激和危险。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Experiencing Léotard’s Sensational Body: Risk, Morality and Pleasure above the British Stage
Early 1860s responses to Jules Léotard’s innovative solo flying trapeze performances span pleasure and excitement to provoking claims of immorality related to risk that seem strange today. I examine the relationship between risk, morality and pleasure in Léotard’s celebrity using newspaper reports and imagery, demonstrating how his celebrity reveals changing attitudes to the body. Audiences evaluated his performances depending on how they valued bodily pleasure and how they connected citizenship, religion, science and progress to athleticism. Considering Léotard alongside the wirewalker Charles Blondin demonstrates how Léotard’s performance and physique mitigated concerns around risk. Making sense of Léotard’s unfamiliar movements often involved processing conflicting physical responses and contradictory viewpoints. ‘Dangerous’ performances drew censure because they provoked these confusing experiences and risk-related concerns of audience coercion and desensitization. Resituating Léotard within the 1860s craze for ‘sensation’ on the basis of newspaper reports and affect, demonstrates Victorians’ bodily preoccupation. Wider risks in society alongside scientific advancements help explain Victorians’ increased focus on the body as they turned to bodily health in the face of urban threats. Against this background, experiencing performers’ embodied vicarious risk enabled Victorians to rehearse, not avoid, the thrills and dangers of Victorian life.
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