Inventing the Spectator
English

About The Book

During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries France became famous - notorious even - across Europe for its ambitious attempts to codify and theorise a system of universally valid dramatic 'rules'. So fundamental and formative was this 'classical' conception of drama that it still underpins our modern conception of theatre today. Yet rather than rehearsing familiar arguments about plays Inventing the Spectator reads early modern France's dramatictheory against the grain tracing instead the profile and characteristics of the spectator that these arguments imply: the living breathing individual in whose mind senses and experience the theatre comes to life. In so doing Joseph Harris raises numerous questions - of imagination and illusion reason andemotion vision and aurality to name but a few - that strike at the very heart of human psychology cognition and experience. Bridging the gap between literary and theatre studies history of psychology and intellectual history Inventing the Spectator thus reconstructs the theatre spectator's experience as it was understood and theorised within French dramatic theory between the Renaissance and the Revolution. It explores early modern spectatorship through three main themes(illusion and the senses; pleasure and narrative; interest and identification) and five key dramatic theoreticians (d'Aubignac Corneille Dubos Rousseau and Diderot). As it demonstrates the period's dramatic rules are at heart rules of psychology cognition and affect that emerged out of a complex dialoguewith human subjectivity in all its richness.
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