RICHARD SCHECHNER, one of the architects of performance studies as a
discipline and the highly respected author of TDR: A Journal of Performance at
New York University, has written an invaluable guide to this interdisciplinary
scholarly area. A vibrant and emergent field (developed within the last two to
three decades), performance studies combines the inquiries and insights of
anthropology, art, dance, ethnology, music, philosophy, theater, theology, and
a host of other subjects. According to Schechner, performance refers to a
"broad continuum of human actions ranging from ritual, play, sports, pop
entertainment, performing arts ... everyday life performance ... healing, the
media, and the Internet." Illustrating the hybridity of performance
worldwide, Schechner surveys everything from Shakespeare to chimpanzee theater,
urban happenings, Ramlila (or the play of Ramal, which takes thirty-one days to
perform in Ramnagar across "the holy city of Banaras"), colonial
mimicry, gender and racial "passing," British prime minister Tony
Blair's performance of "informality" before a television camera, the
pig-kill dance in Papua New Guinea, and terrorism as a performance event. Eddie
Murphy, Leadbelly, and the Road Warrior Wrestling Team share billing with
Chekhov, Gandhi, and Shakespeare. For Schechner, "performance studies
resists fixed definitions." In fact, like polymers, it may be easier to
say what performance is rather than what it is not.
Schechner offers eight invigorating chapters on the modalities of
performativity. The earlier ones interrogate the foundational and taxonomic
issues of who, how, and why, embracing such topics as "Eight Kinds of
Performances," ethical issues of acting, and changing and inventing
rituals. His middle chapters turn to the origins, places, and times of
performances (sacred and secular); the qualities, bias, and messages of play;
and then, in chapters 5 and 6, he offers an exceptionally cogent and lucid
philosophical grounding for performance studies in poststructuralism and
postmodernism. Using the works of Derrida, Jameson, Foucault, and Richard
Foreman, to cite only a few of the many theorists whose insights are included,
Schechner demonstrates how "the collapse of categories" and "the
evaporation of audience" play major parts in the evolution of performance
events. In his final chapter, "Global and Intercultural Performance,"
Schechner moves into new arenas of Internet (digital vs. written) performances,
Hollywood hi-tech scripts, and transcultural diversity.
Of special interest to students of world literature, Schechner judiciously
incorporates a goodly amount of modern theater into his analysis of the
performance process. Brecht's views on actors, directing, and the audience's
alienation illustrate for Schechner a theater that challenges instead of
corroborates, one that, like so many other types of performances,
"proposes alternative actions, and demystifies events." Schechner
also liberally incorporates the theories, scripts, and actor's exercises of
Jerzy Grotowski, and Vsevelod Meyerhold before him, to zero in on staging in an
"environmental theatre" and performer-actor relationships, which
counter traditional views of the audience as passive as the set: perfunctorily
realistic, defined, and present. Further demonstrating Schechner's deep
knowledge of performance theorists, he surveys the views of Guillermo Gomez-Pe
a, a Mexican artist and writer, to explain this new intercultural performance
that is, in Gomez-Pe a's words, "cross-racial, polylinguisic, and
multicultural."
Schechner's extraordinary breadth of coverage and carefully tuned
interpretations of performance studies are complemented by two special
features--nearly two hundred photos and drawings of people, events, art, and
architecture engaged in the performance process and at least one hundred
extracts, or boxed inserts, from the "many voices" who supply
"alternative opinions and interruptions," much like "open conversation"
and "hyperlinks." Thus, even in its design Schechner's book--a
veritable vade mecum--weaves readers and writers, and the author him-sell into
the montage of performance.
Philip C. Kolin