Ebook: Baroque, Venice, Theatre, Philosophy
Author: Will Daddario (auth.)
- Tags: Theatre History, Aesthetics, History of Early Modern Europe, Fine Arts, National/Regional Theatre and Performance
- Series: Performance Philosophy
- Year: 2017
- Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- pdf
This book theorizes the baroque as neither a time period nor an artistic style but as a collection of bodily practices developed from clashes between governmental discipline and artistic excess, moving between the dramaturgy of Jesuit spiritual exercises, the political theatre-making of Angelo Beolco (aka Ruzzante), and the civic governance of the Venetian Republic at a time of great tumult. The manuscript assembles plays seldom read or viewed by English-speaking audiences, archival materials from three Venetian archives, and several secondary sources on baroque, Renaissance, and early modern epistemology in order to forward and argument for understanding the baroque as a gathering of social practices. Such a rethinking of the baroque aims to complement the already lively studies of neo-baroque aesthetics and ethics emerging in contemporary scholarship on (for example) Latin American political art.