Home
The Absent One: Mourning Ritual, Tragedy, and the Performance of Ambivalence
Loading Inventory...
Barnes and Noble
The Absent One: Mourning Ritual, Tragedy, and the Performance of Ambivalence
Current price: $34.95
Barnes and Noble
The Absent One: Mourning Ritual, Tragedy, and the Performance of Ambivalence
Current price: $34.95
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
*Product Information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, and additional information please contact Barnes and Noble
Here is presented a new theory of the origins of tragedy, based on its perceived kinship with mourning ritual. Mourners and tragic protagonists alike journey through dangerous transitional states, confront the uncanny, express themselves in antithetical style, and, above all,
enact
their ambivalence toward their beloved dead. Elements common to both tragedy and mourning ritual are first identified in actual Chinese, African, and Greek funerary rites and then analyzed in tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, Racine, Ibsen, O’Neill, Miller, Beckett, and Ionesco. Included is a firsthand account of exploration of the tragedy-mourning link in the rehearsal process of the great experimental theater director, Joseph Chaikin.
Opening her first chapter, Dr. Cole says, “The grave is the birthplace of tragic drama and ghosts are its procreators. For tragedy is the performance of ambivalence which ghosts emblematize: what we fear in particular—the revenant, the ghost returning to haunt us—is also what we desire—the extending of life beyond the moment of death.”
enact
their ambivalence toward their beloved dead. Elements common to both tragedy and mourning ritual are first identified in actual Chinese, African, and Greek funerary rites and then analyzed in tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Shakespeare, Racine, Ibsen, O’Neill, Miller, Beckett, and Ionesco. Included is a firsthand account of exploration of the tragedy-mourning link in the rehearsal process of the great experimental theater director, Joseph Chaikin.
Opening her first chapter, Dr. Cole says, “The grave is the birthplace of tragic drama and ghosts are its procreators. For tragedy is the performance of ambivalence which ghosts emblematize: what we fear in particular—the revenant, the ghost returning to haunt us—is also what we desire—the extending of life beyond the moment of death.”