(Re)telling old stories : Peter Brook's Mahabharata and Ariane Mnouchkine's Les Atrides / Dominic Glynn, Monographie imprimée
Language: anglais.Country: Belgique.Publication : Bruxelles : P.I.E. P. Lang, DL 2015, cop. 2015Description: 1 vol. (144 p.) ; 23 cmISBN: 978-2-87574-259-9; 2-87574-259-0.Dewey: 800Abstract: La 4e de couv. porte : "Peter Brook and Ariane Mnouchkine are among the most important directors in recent theatre history. This book focuses on two of their landmark productions, 'Mahabharata' (1985) and 'Les Atrides' (1992-1994) respectively, in order to uncover parallel methodologies in the transfer of ancient mythological narratives to the contemporary French stage. It investigates audiences' relationship with these works re-told, questioning their/our relationship to heritage, at a time when marketing departments and politicians re-hash the same old stories to cajole would-be consumers and voters.".Bibliography: Bibliogr. p. 131-144. Notes bibliogr..Subject - Family: Atrides (mythologie grecque) Au théâtre Subject - Author/Title: Brook, Peter (1925-....), Mahabharata | Mnouchkine, Ariane (1939-....), Les Atrides Subject - Topical Name: Théâtre -- France 20e siècle | Adaptations théâtrales Histoire et critiqueItem type | Home library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Prêt normal | Bibliothèque provisoire Bron Salle de lecture | Spectacle (Arts du spectacle) | 792.082 GLY (Browse shelf (Opens below)) | Available | 0379745605 |
Bibliogr. p. 131-144. Notes bibliogr.
La 4e de couv. porte : "Peter Brook and Ariane Mnouchkine are among the most important directors in recent theatre history. This book focuses on two of their landmark productions, 'Mahabharata' (1985) and 'Les Atrides' (1992-1994) respectively, in order to uncover parallel methodologies in the transfer of ancient mythological narratives to the contemporary French stage. It investigates audiences' relationship with these works re-told, questioning their/our relationship to heritage, at a time when marketing departments and politicians re-hash the same old stories to cajole would-be consumers and voters."