Re-situating Performance Within The Ambiguous, The Liminal, And The Threshold: Performance Practice Understood Through Theories Of Embodiment
dc.contributor.advisor
Nelson, Peter
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dc.contributor.advisor
Coyne, Richard
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dc.contributor.author
Schroeder, Franziska
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dc.date.accessioned
2007-08-29T12:19:16Z
dc.date.available
2007-08-29T12:19:16Z
dc.date.issued
2006
dc.description.abstract
This thesis investigates performance as an embodied practice. It draws on theories of
embodiment, which act as a catalyst for thinking about performance, and thus provide an
interdisciplinary framework for conceptualising the body in performance.
I explore a discourse that situates performance itself within the liminal, as an in-between
condition, as something that does not fit in. I reflect on performances, ranging from music to
cosmetic surgery, and I highlight the in-between conditions and the marginalised space that in
my view posits performance as multivalent, multifaceted and full of potential. This line of
enquiry is informed by my view of the body as a site of change, discord and ambiguity; what
one can refer to as the threshold condition, or what Victor Turner calls the “state of betwixt and
between” (Turner, 1982, p.17). I take the body as a starting point for this discussion, as I
consider the body as a vanguard to providing a different view to the majority of current music
and performance writings. I subscribe to the view that the multi-faceted and, at times, highly
controversial debate that has been applied to the body, has not been equivalently explored in the
discussion of performance.
My background as a music performer who works extensively with new technologies leads
me to examine predominantly performance environments that use such technologies. I thus
draw on examples from laptop performances and from my work as designer and musician of
various performative environments. Other ideas in this thesis are informed by the ways in which
I engage with an instrument, prepare for, and think about a performance, as well as from being a
listener to somebody else’s performance.
A body of writings from various other disciplines forms the backbone to my investigation. I
believe that these writings draw attention to essential facets of performance activities and
provide different ways of conceptualising performance that I argue are currently under-explored
in current music and performance texts.
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14603822 bytes
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dc.format.mimetype
application/pdf
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dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/1842/1949
dc.language.iso
en
dc.subject
music
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dc.title
Re-situating Performance Within The Ambiguous, The Liminal, And The Threshold: Performance Practice Understood Through Theories Of Embodiment
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dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
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dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
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dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
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