Ahistorical Avant-Gardism and the Theater

Loading...
Publication Logo

Date

2013

Authors

Cardullo, Robert J.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Springer

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

No

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Publicly Funded

No
Impulse
Average
Influence
Average
Popularity
Average

Research Projects

Journal Issue

Abstract

Critics and scholars have been debating the origins, definitions and continued validity of the avant-garde since the early twentieth century. Theoretical arguments have postulated the death of the avant-garde; to counter them, critical claims have cited the ever-present avant-garde tendencies in contemporary theater and art. Although the avant-garde has undergone radical shifts in the second half of the twentieth century, it remains a viable, practical concept in theater as it manifests a pervasive impulse to push aesthetic boundaries. To amend Mark Twain's famous adage, then, reports of the avant-garde's demise have been greatly exaggerated. Declarations of its death are founded on the presumption of an idyllic moment in history-the time of the historic Western avant-gardeaEuroin which socially, politically and aesthetically subversive theater stood diametrically opposed to mainstream culture. In fact, such an era might never have truly existed. Instead, if we see the avant-garde as an allowed fool, the embodiment of a subversive impulse that mainstream culture permits to exist on its edges, we can gauge the vitality of the avant-garde as a question of location rather than existence. The avant-garde never dies; it merely shifts its place from the extreme edge of the mainstream to a spectrum of slightly more respectable places within the mainstream. The avant-garde thus becomes a repeating phenomenon with a nonlinear life, which moves in cycles and is not limited to a single geographic region like Europe.

Description

Keywords

Avant-gardism, World theater and drama, Dramatic theory, Postmodernism, Historicism

Fields of Science

0601 history and archaeology, 06 humanities and the arts, 0604 arts

Citation

WoS Q

Scopus Q

Q2
OpenCitations Logo
OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A

Source

Neophılologus

Volume

97

Issue

3

Start Page

437

End Page

457
PlumX Metrics
Citations

Scopus : 2

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 2

Google Scholar Logo
Google Scholar™
OpenAlex Logo
OpenAlex FWCI
0.0

Sustainable Development Goals