Theory for Theatre Studies
Sound
(Author) Susan BennettTheatres in ancient Greece and Aristotle's poetics -- The vocal map of ancient Greek drama -- Case study : Aristophanes's The frogs -- Vitruvius on acoustics : de architectura -- Shakespeare's Globe and Francis Bacon's Sylva sylvarum -- Acoustic world-making on the early modern stage -- Case study : Shakespeare's The tempest -- A sonic imagination of early modern London -- New technologies for sound performance -- Case study : Luigi Russolo's Intonamuri and "the art of noise" -- Hanging on the telephone : Sigmund Freud and Roland Barthes -- Case study : Jean Cocteau's The human voice -- The sounds of silence : John Cage's Future of music -- Acousmatics and radiophonics : Pierre Schaffer and the BBC -- Aura and archive : making sound memories -- Case study : Samuel Beckett's Krapp's last tape -- Prosthetic performance and deterritorialised listening -- Case study : Janet Cardiff's Sound walks -- Listening to women : Andrea Hornick and Luce Irigaray -- Affective theatres of embodied sound -- Case study : Shannon Yee's "Reassembled slightly askew" -- Case study : Rimini Protokoll's Situation rooms -- Coda : sound across the world.
Susan Bennett
Susan Bennett is a renowned American author best known for her novel "The Bookshop on the Corner," which explores themes of love, loss, and the power of books to transform lives. Her writing style is characterized by vivid imagery, compelling characters, and heartfelt storytelling. Bennett's work has made a significant impact on contemporary literature, earning her critical acclaim and a devoted readership.