CONTEMPORARY THEATRE PRACTICE

Similar documents
CONTEMPORARY THEATRE PRACTICE

THE 6507 Dramatic Theory and Criticism

Theatre 476: Seminar in Theatre History: Theories of Acting and Directing CVA 132; Tuesdays and Thursdays 9:00 10:15 am Fall Semester, 2009


A-H 624 section 001. Theory and Methods: Kant and Hegel on Art and Culture. Wednesday 5:00 7:30 pm. Fine Arts 308A. Prof.

Introduction to Acting Syllabus THTR 105 Assistant Professor Susan Pfeffer

Department of American Studies M.A. thesis requirements

DAA 3684 Dance Performance Spring Semester, 2017

MUS : SURVEY OF MUSIC LITERATURE Cultural Arts Building, 1023 TTR 5:00-6:15 p.m.

LSC 606 Cataloging and Classification Summer 2007

Westminster College School of Music Fall, 2018

REQUIRED TEXT: Griswold, H. Gene: Teaching Woodwinds. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson, 2008

GUIDELINES FOR APPLIED VOICE

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2016

Pre-Requisite: Prerequisite includes MUT 2117 Music Theory IV with a grade of C or higher.

MUS Chamber Choir (TR 2-250) Spring 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS

Stephen F. Austin State University School of Music

Music 4 - Exploring Music Fall 2015

2017 Summer Session: May 31 June 28 Course Synopsis Requirements Class participation and short critical responses:

(THE 3313) Theatre History / Dramatic Literature 3

Welcome to MUCT 2210 Exploring Classical Music

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2016

Percussion Ensemble Syllabus Spring 2018

Syllabus for ENGL 304: Shakespeare STAGING GENDER AND POLITICS FROM EARLY TRAGEDY AND COMEDY TO LATE ROMANCE

Angelo State University Syllabus Instrumental Literature

I. PREREQUISITES For information regarding prerequisites for this course, please refer to the Academic Course Catalog.

HISTORY 3800 (The Historian s Craft), Spring :00 MWF, Haley 2196

MU 323 ELEMENTARY PIANO III

Department of American Studies B.A. thesis requirements

Introduction to International Relations POLI 65 Summer 2016

American Music (MUSI 1310) Spring, 2016 HCC Distance Education

PEOPLE PLACES AND PLAYS: Theatre That Changed The World

Instructor: Dr. Gregory Oakes Office Hours: Wednesdays 10:00am and by appointment Music Hall 215

Learning Outcomes By the end of this class, students should be able to:

Music Appreciation Course Syllabus Fall 2014

THE AMERICAN PEOPLE AND THEIR MUSIC

SYLLABUS FOR CHILDRENS LITERATURE

San José State University School of Music and Dance MUSC 147A, Beginning Conducting, Fall 2014

University of Florida School of Music Woodwind Skills 1 - Clarinet Section Course Syllabus

Degenerative Europe: Politics and Modern Art in 20 th Century Literature and Culture

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP Fall 2018

Handbook & Guidelines

Theatre Arts 121 History of the Theatre II 1600 to 1980 Spring, Theoretical Introduction

MU 321 ELEMENTARY PIANO I

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP 3201/3202 Fall 2018

*In English 201, you will hone the critical writing skills you worked on in English 101.

DISABILITY ACCOMMODATIONS POLICY

Anthony Donaldson, Jr Office Hours- Keene-Flint Hall 213- W 12:00-1:50 P.M. and by appointment History Department

Philosophy of Art and Aesthetic Experience in Rome PHIL 277 Fall 2018

THEATRE 479: DRAMA THEORY AND CRITICISM SPRING 2010; TUESDAYS 1:00 3:50 PM INSTRUCTOR: ALAN SIKES

Film 100A-1: Introduction to the Moving Image Brandeis University Spring 2019

Aesthetics. Phil-267 Department of Philosophy Wesleyan University Spring Thursday 7:00-9:50 pm Location: Wyllys 115

PERCUSSION SYLLABUS FOR APPLIED PERCUSSION LESSONS (Lower Division 149, 151, 152, Upper Division 352, & Graduate 551, 552)

Course Policies. Students are responsible for all work that is due and covered in the sessions they miss.

LIT : Children s Literature

Albright, chs. 1, 2.A.1-2.A.2, 2-A.3,pp (exercise at end of chapter 2.A.2 is homework); O Connor s Commentary, ch. 2.F,* pp.

Music Business and Industry MUS Fall 2016 M-W-F 8:30 9:20 PAC, Rm. M261

DEPARTMENT OF FINE ARTS COURSE OUTLINE WINTER 2016 TR 14:30-15:50, L123

Required text: Scott Deveaux & Gary Giddens, Jazz: Essential Listening (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2011). ISBN:

COURSE: Course Number: COM110T4 & TN4 Course Name: Written Research Practicum CREDIT: Semester Hours: 1 SEMESTER: Spring 2018

LM-5300.OL Credits: 3 Literature (CRN: )

Trombone Study at the University of Florida

DIVISION OF KEYBOARD STUDIES HANDBOOK FOR PIANO AREA PIANO CONCENTRATION Updated Spring 2019

MU 341 INTERMEDIATE PIANO

Office: Krannert Level Office Hours: MW 12:00-12:50 Meeting time: MWF, 11-11:50 Classroom: Armory 242

English 598: Rhetoric, Argument, and Writing. Fall 2017 Section A-01.

Course Syllabus. Professor Contact Information. Office Location JO Office Hours T 10:00-11:30

Timothy Freeze, Ph.D.

MUSI 1306 Music Appreciation 3 Creative Arts MUSI 1306

Syllabus Woodwind Studios: MUAP 1201/2201 Spring 2018

JEFFERSON COLLEGE COURSE SYLLABUS ENG143 LITERATURE FOR CHILDREN. 3 Credit Hours. Prepared by: Mindy Selsor

HISTORY 239. Imperial Spain -- Fall 2013

University of Florida Jazz Band Syllabus and Student Handbook (MUN 1710, MUN 3713 and MUN 6715 ) Fall Website:

MUS 304 Introduction to Ethnomusicology Syllabus Fall 2010

Existentialist Metaphysics PHIL 235 FALL 2011 MWF 2:20-3:20

UCSC Summer Session MUSIC 11D Introduction to World Music. Class Times: TTH 1:00 4:30 pm Class Location: Music Center 138 (DARC 340 July10 21)

FTT 30461: History of Television Spring 2008

Course Syllabus: MENG 6510: Eminent Writers, Ralph Waldo Emerson

CEDAR CREST COLLEGE REL Spring 2010, Tuesdays/Thursdays, 2:30 3:45 p.m. Issues in Death and Dying 3 credits

Film 100: Introduction to the Moving Image Brandeis University Spring 2018

Music and Creative Interaction for the Elementary Classroom Teacher SPRING 2014 COURSE SYLLABUS EDUC & FROSTBURG STATE UNIVERSITY

Introduction to Western Music

Literary and Cultural Theory CLC 3300G - Winter 2015

East China Normal University International Summer Session. FIM 11 Introduction to Film Studies

MUSIC COMPOSITION. Composition VI Syllabus for Fall 2012

MUS 4712 History and Literature of Choral Music Large Forms Monday/Wednesday - 12:30pm-3:00pm Room: Mus 120

East China Normal University International Summer Session. FIM 11 Introduction to Film Studies

Major Film Movements English 344L Class Unique Number: 34845

Keyboard Area Handbook for Undergraduate and Graduate Students in Applied Keyboard Courses

HRS 105 Approaches to the Humanities

LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGE LBCL 393: Modes of Expression and Interpretation II. ATTENDANCE IS REQUIRED Section A: MW 14:45-16:00 I.

COURSE: Course Number: COM110T1 & TN1 Course Name: Written Research Practicum CREDIT: Semester Hours: 1 SEMESTER: Spring 2018

Orchestration Syllabus MUCP 4320 and MUCP 5320

MUSIC DEPARMENT LONG BEACH CITY COLLEGE MUSIC OF MULTICULTURAL AMERICA MUSIC 35

The Tohickon Middle School Band Handbook

Early American History. Date: Period: Ms. McFarland. Early American History - Research Paper

Sociology 325: Departmental Seminar for Juniors Social Influences on the Experience of Health, Illness and Disability Spring 2009

COURSE APPROVAL DOCUMENT Southeast Missouri State University. Department: English Course No. LI 317

Performance Dates on Jazz Band Website

200 level, and AHPH 202

Transcription:

CONTEMPORARY THEATRE PRACTICE Dr. Julia Listengarten Spring 2017 Office: PAC Theatre 220 M260; T/R 12:30-1:50 Phone: 823-3858 Office hours: Tuesday/Thursday 2:00-5:00, and by appointment Julia.listengarten@ucf.edu COURSE DESCRIPTION: This graduate course will examine various avant-garde movements and trends in theatre from the late nineteenth-century to the present day. Among these movements are Symbolism, Futurism, Dada, Expressionism, Surrealism, and Theatre of the Absurd, as well as various avant-garde developments in the second half of the twentieth century. The course will also examine the history of American avant-garde theatre with particular emphasis on happenings and rituals of the sixties as well as postmodern and multicultural trends in contemporary theatre practice. In addition, we will investigate theories and practice of significant twentieth-century directors and discuss a number of plays as sources and reflections of avant-garde theatrical history and philosophy. The class will consist of a mixture of lectures, discussions, and presentations. Students are expected to come to class with things to talk about drawn from their reading, their thinking, and their practical experience in the theatre. Being prepared means doing more than just quickly skimming the plays. I approach teaching as a mutual exchange of ideas, hypotheses, and propositions. I am not here merely to feed you information just as you are not here to accept what I say unthinkingly. And feel free to argue with anything you read, or anything I or your peers say; your grade will not be affected just because you disagree with me. The last few weeks of the semester will focus on the process of theatrical research and writing. Coursework will culminate in a final paper, which might be submitted to a journal to be considered for publication. Required Texts: Ed. Robert Knopf, Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950 (2015) Arnold Aronson, American Avant-Garde Theatre: A History (2000) Ed. Richard Drain, Twentieth Century Theatre: A Sourcebook (1995) Gibaldi/Achtert, MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers. Latest edition Suggested text: Eds. Robert Knopf and Julia Listengarten, Theater of the Avant-Garde, 1950-2000 (2011) Required Plays: Maeterlinck, Interior Bruisov, The Wayfarer Strindberg, The Ghost Sonata

2 Jarry, Ubu Roi Marinetti, Feet Boccioni, Genius and Culture Kaiser, From Morn to Midnight Stein, Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights Artaud, The Spurt of Blood Lorca, Blood Wedding Ionesco, The Bald Soprano Genet, The Maids Albee, The Zoo Story Pinter, Homecoming Whitman, Night Time Sky Tadeusz Kantor, The Dead Class (excerpt) Vogel, The Baltimore Waltz Caryl Churchill, Far Away Reza Abdoh, Hip-Hop Waltz of Eurydice Susan-Lori Parks, Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World Hélène Cixous, Portrait of Dora Griselda Gambaro, Stripped Additional reading material will be assigned every week. There will also be a few videotapes. It is important to keep up with readings. Please make an appointment to see me if you are having trouble. ATTENDANCE: Attendance is mandatory. There will be NO make-up presentations or reports. You are responsible for all classes missed. You will be allowed 2 absences per semester in case of illness or emergency. If you need to miss class, you must contact me by phone or note before class. Each unexcused absence will lower your grade one-third of a letter (from B+ to B, for instance). Please be punctual. Three tardies=one unexcused absence for the purpose of grading. If you miss more than 4 classes, you will fail this course. Note: Plus and minus grades will be implemented in the grading policy. The following is the system that will be used to determine your grade: Grade Grade Point Value Grade Grade Point Value A 4.00 93-100 C 2.00 73-76 A- 3.75 90-92 C- 1.75 70-72 B+ 3.25 87-89 D+ 1.25 67-69 B 3.00 83-86 D 1.00 63-66 B- 2.75 80-82 D- 0.75 60-62 C+ 2.25 77-79 F 0.00 59 NO LATE ASSIGNMENTS OR PAPERS

3 COURSE REQUIREMENTS: Attendance: in 2-3 sentences, provide your own definition of avant-garde by January 13 (in Webcourses). 1. Class participation (150 pts.) There will be a series of scene readings and discussions in which each student will participate. Participation in this class is essential, both to maintain a high level of discussion and to encourage you to practice your spoken communication skills. You will be graded on quality as well as quantity of your participation. 2. Research report (50 pts.), ten to fifteen minutes. A handout with bibliography is required. The body of your presentation should contain: Clear context and theoretical/ historical framework (15 pts.) Concise research portion (15 pts.) Guiding questions to generate further discussion (15 pts.) Bibliography (5 pts.) 3. Creative project (100 pts.) 4. Research Paper (100 pts.) Guidelines for the Research Paper: Identify major theoretical tenets, assumptions, traditions, and tendencies that have interested you over the course of the semester Choose your research topic and write a one page abstract for your paper, including a preliminary thesis and anticipated outcomes Prepare a working bibliography for your intended topic Write an outline a preliminary structure for the final paper Write a prospective introduction to your paper (1-2 pages) Describe three major issues that you are going to develop in the main body of your paper Work on the paper 5. Final Paper (100 pts.), ten to fifteen pages, on a topic approved by me, or Creative Project Total: 500 points NO LATE ASSIGNMENTS OR PAPERS CLASS TOPICS AND ASSIGNMENTS Week of January 9: Topics: Introduction: what is Avant-Garde? Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Introduction (Thursday)

4 Week of January 16: Topics: Franco-Russian Symbolism: Maeterlinck, Interior (Tuesday) The Wayfarer (Tuesday) Pataphysical Theater: Jarry, Ubu Roi (Thursday) Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapters 1 & 2 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: # 1 Interior, The Wayfarer, Ubu Roi Week of January 23: Topics: Intimate Theater/Chamber Drama: Strindberg, The Ghost Sonata (Tuesday) Italian Futurism: Marinetti, Feet; Boccioni, Genius and Culture (Thursday) Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapters 3 & 5 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: ## 5, 41, 57 Strindberg, The Ghost Sonata Marinetti, Feet; Boccioni, Genius and Culture Week of January 30: Topics: German Expressionism: Kaiser, From Morn to Midnight (Tuesday) Dada; French Surrealism: Vitrac, The Mysteries of Love (Thursday) Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapters 6, 7, & 9 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: ## 6, 8 Kaiser, From Morn to Midnight Vitrac, The Mysteries of Love Week of February 6: Topics: Theatre of Cruelty: Artaud, The Spurt of Blood (Tuesday) Lorca, Blood Wedding (Thursday) Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapters 10 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: ## 68, 73 Artaud, The Spurt of Blood Lorca, Blood Wedding Week of February 13: Topics: American Dada and Surrealism: Stein, Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights (Tuesday) Discussion of the Creative Project (Tuesday) Theatre of the Absurd: Albee, The Zoo Story (Thursday)

5 Ionesco, The Bald Soprano (Thursday) Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapters 12 & 13 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: # 17 Stein, Doctor Faustus Lights the Lights Albee, The Zoo Story Ionesco, The Bald Soprano Week of February 20: Topics: Theatre of the Absurd (continued): Pinter, Homecoming; Genet, The Maids (Tuesday) Thursday: Creative Project. Part 1 Reading: Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1890-1950, Chapter 13 Pinter, Homecoming Genet, The Maids Week of February 27: Topics: Origins of the American Avant-Garde; Theories and Foundations (Tuesday) Thursday: Creative Project. Part II Reading: American Avant-Garde Theater: A History, Chapters 1 & 2 Week of March 6: Topics: Origins of the American Avant-Garde; Theories and Foundations (continued) (Tuesday) Off-Broadway, Happenings, and the Living Theatre: (Thursday) Discussion of Essay Topics Reading: American Avant-Garde Theater: A History, Chapter 3 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: # 69 Whitman, Night Time Sky Theater of the Avant-Garde; 1950-2000, Chapters 2 & 5 Week of March 13: Spring Break Week of March 20:

6 Topics: The 1960s Collectives and Rituals: Grotowski, The Open Theatre, The Performance Group, Andre Serban (Tuesday) Week of March 27: Research/Catch up Day (Thursday) Topics: Postmodern Multicultural, and Multidisciplinary Trends in Performance: Peter Brook, Robert Wilson, Richard Foreman, Eugenio Barba, Pina Bausch, Martha Clarke, Tadeusz Kantor (Tuesday) Performance Art: Spalding Gray, Elizabeth LeCompte, The Wooster Group (Thursday) Reading: American Avant-Garde Theater: A History, Chapters 4 & 5 Twentieth-Century Theatre: A Sourcebook: # 19, 20, 21, 70, 78, 84 Introduction to Theater of the Avant-Garde: 1950-2000 Tadeusz Kantor, The Dead Class (excerpt) Theater of the Avant-Garde; 1950-2000, Chapter 5 Week of April 3 Topics: Reza Abdoh, Hip-Hop Waltz of Eurydice (Tuesday) Camp: Ludlam; Sontag (Thursday) Reading: American Avant-Garde Theater: A History, Chapters 6 & 7 Theater of the Avant-Garde; 1950-2000, Chapters 4 & 6 Reza Abdoh, Hip-Hop Waltz of Eurydice Sontag, Notes on Camp Ludlam, Camp Paper DUE Thursday, April 6 Week of April 10: Topics: Avant-Garde Trends in Contemporary American Playwriting Vogel, The Baltimore Waltz (Tuesday) Suzan-Lori Parks, Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World (Thursday) Reading: Vogel, The Baltimore Waltz Suzan-Lori Parks, Death of the Last Black Man in the Whole Entire World Theater of the Avant-Garde; 1950-2000, Chapter 2

7 Week of April 17: Topics: Theatre from a Feminist Perspective: Ariane Mnouchkine, Judy Chicago, Hélène Cixous, Carolee Schneemann, Karen Finley (Tuesday) Hélène Cixous, Portrait of Dora (Tuesday) Contemporary European and Latin American Perspectives in Playwriting: McDonagh, Mark Ravenhill, Sarah Kane, Caryl Chirchill, Griselda Gambaro, Heiner Müller Caryl Churchill, Far Away (Thursday) Gambaro, Stripped (Thursday) Reading: Hélène Cixous, Portrait of Dora Caryl Churchill, Far Away Gambaro, Stripped Twentieth-Century Theatre: # # 30, 31, 32, 33, 83 Theater of the Avant-Garde; 1950-2000, Chapters 5 & 6 Final: Thursday, April 27, 10:00 AM 12:50 PM Notes: 1. All written assignments must be typed. Handwritten assignments and papers will not be accepted. Papers must be stapled before you arrive in class. 2. All written work must meet the standards of basic expository writing and must follow the style outlined in the MLA Handbook. Grammar, clarity, organization, style, and documentation count and will affect your grade. 3. The penalty for plagiarism is the semester grade of F. Disclaimer This syllabus is subject to change at the discretion of the instructor. There are plays and materials that may express adult or controversial themes as well as strong language. If this presents a problem for you, please see the instructor immediately to access your chances for success in the course. Any student in this course who has a disability that may prevent him or her from fully demonstrating his or her abilities should contact me personally so we can discuss

8 accommodations necessary to ensure full participation and facilitate your educational opportunity. It is the policy of the University to reasonably accommodate absences due to observed religious holidays. However, the student will be held responsible for any material covered during the absence and must inform the instructor two weeks prior the holiday. Since theatre requires the use of mind, voice, and body, there might be situations that will require a certain amount of physical contact between you and the instructor and other students. If this presents a problem for you, please see the instructor immediately to access your chances for success in the course.