Ahistorical Avant-Gardism and the Theater
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Date
2013
Authors
Cardullo, Robert J.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
No
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Publicly Funded
No
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 Citation Count
N/A
Source
Neophılologus
Volume
97
Issue
3
Start Page
437
End Page
457
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Scopus : 2
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Mendeley Readers : 2
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