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The Theater and Its Double
 
 

The Theater and Its Double [Paperback]

Antonin Artaud , Mary C. Richard
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Since its first publication in 1938, The Theater and Its Double by the French artist and philosopher Antonin Artaud has continued to provoke, inspire, enrage, enliven, challenge, and goad any number of theatrical debates in its call for a "Theater of Cruelty." A trio of theatrical manifestos, the book is an aggressive attack on many of the most treasured beliefs of both theater and Western culture. According to Artaud, the theater's "double" is similar to its Jungian "shadow," the unacknowledged, unconscious element that completes it but is in many ways its opposite. As "culture" inexorably draws the artistic impulse into safe channels, the repressed irrational urges of theater, based on dreams, religion, and emotion, are increasingly necessary to "purge" the sickness of society. Artaud identifies language itself as one of the major cultural culprits, and his attacks on it occasionally makes his text rough going. But his challenge to restore relevance to the heart of the theatrical experience remains fundamental to the vitality of theater, and his insistence on the sensory experience of drama as opposed to the literary (and such innovative ideas as the use of unconventional "found spaces") continues to be the clarion call of the theatrical avant-garde. --John Longenbaugh

From the Inside Flap

In 1946 a celebration at the Theatre Sarah-Bernhardt in Paris, attended by many leading figures in the French theater, paid homage to Antonin Artaud, whose work had revolutionized the modern theater. Tributes to him came from Andre Gide, Claudel and others who, in observing his uncompromising search for magic and truth, had been influenced by him.

The Theater and Its Double, the first English translation of a collection of manifestoes originally published in 1938, is the fullest statement of the ideas of Artaud. "We cannot go on prostituting the idea of the theater, the only value of which is in its excruciating, magical relation to reality and danger," he wrote. In three famous essays, "No More Masterpieces," "An Affective Athleticism," and "The Theater and the Plague," which appear in this book, he repudiated all literature written to be performed, all Western traditions and civilization itself. He wished to destroy all forms of language and all social proprieties in order to bring life into the theater and to make actors and audience into "victims burnt at the stake, signaling through the flames."

Artaud was deeply impressed by the Oriental theater; his outlook was derived in part from his understanding of the Balinese stage. With these manifestos he sought to recreate the theater, "to break through language in order to touch life."

"The Theater and Its Double is far and away the most important thing that has been written about the theater in the twentieth century.... It should be read again and again.... Artaud oozed magical desires. He was the metaphysician of the theater."--Jean-Louis Barrault

In 1946 Antonin Artaud, who had been a film actor, a director and a playwright, was released from nine years of tragic confinement in asylums for the insane. He died two years later, leaving behind him a large body of important criticism, of which The Theater and Its Double is probably the most representative.


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The archives of the little town of Cagliari, in Sardinia, contain the account of an astonishing historical fact. Read the first page
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3.0 out of 5 stars Signaling furiously through the flames, May 24 2002
This review is from: The Theater and Its Double (Paperback)
Antonin Artaud's obsession -- and I don't think that's too strong a word in this context -- lay in building a new philosophical framework for live theater, one that would give audiences unmediated access to powerful metaphysical truths. This book is keystone text that illuminates the rest of his life's work. Ultimately, it's not a satisfying one because of its repetitive and mystical nature and because, placed in historical context, Artaud's conception of what should constitute living theater seems somewhat constricted to later, media-saturated generations.

Let there be no mistake, however. The theatre francais of Artaud's day was hidebound by convention, a convention that surrealism took as somewhat of a challenge to overturn. Artaud's plea for a theater that would de-emphasize the spoken text and accord more emphasis on light, sound, movement and elaborate combinations of anything non-verbal that could be brought to bear on audiences is part and parcel of the surrealist rejection of theatrical convention. It is striking that Artaud, himself a marvelous film actor, dismissed out of hand the notion that motion pictures as an art form could do what live theater could not. In this respect lies the most obvious example of his limited vision. Film would eventually provide the director with all the tools that Artaud dreamed of for his Theatre of Cruelty. Bergman, Fellini, Kurosawa and Tarkovsky would all draw heavily on the notion of subordinating conventional dialogue to image and sound. Artaud's notion of theater is further undercut by the rise of television, its ubiquity and, in the age of digital electronics and computers, its raw immediacy. Television gives us unmediated images of real violence and conflict, of death on a horrendous scale, but many of us would rightly question whether being directly confronted by the unreasoning cruelty of the world we live in is especially ennobling or enlightening. In fact, many of us might argue the opposite, that it coarsens us, that it hardens the soul against outrage.

So, why give Artaud three stars for this book? Because there are some very crucial things that he gets right in this collection of essays. Most importantly, Artaud draws repeated attention to the flaws of complacency in theatrical production. It took an Artaud to remind Western civilization that theater's roots lay in public spectacle and religious rite and that its estrangement from those roots was killing theater as a living form of art. It took an Artaud to take theater off the stage and put it into the public space surrounding the audience, breaking the plane of conformity that separated actors from audience. Artaud, perhaps most ironically, reminds us that we call theatrical performers "actors" for a very good, but forgotten, reason -- their art at its peak acts upon the audience with a transformative power.

This very dense and, at times, mystifying collection is worth the effort required to read through it and come to grips with intellectually. I would especially encourage anyone interested in film as an art form to read Artaud and ponder how his insistence that a wide range of sense data can reconnect an audience with vital truths could be adapted to the cinema. For here, in a new art form that is still willing to tap into daring innovation, is where Antonin Artaud's passion is most likely to find a permanent home.

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5.0 out of 5 stars "The only cure for madness is the innocence of facts" (150)., Oct 28 2000
By 
Absurdist Ad Nauseam (Pittsburgh, PA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Theater and Its Double (Paperback)
I'll admit that this is the first time I've read Artaud. And I'll admit that when I began reading the first section, The Theater and the Plague, I thought on numerous occasions, "Where is this guy going with this?" Upon concluding this section, and after picking myself up off the floor, I returned to the beginning for a another read through, and again, afterward, found myself floored. Artaud presents a take on theatre like none other. A take that many may disagree with, but few can deny the illuminating profundity of his analogies, correlations, and general theatrical philosophizing. But don't think Artaud is without a sense of humor. With a blurt like, "I saw some sort of human snakes, otherwise known as playwrights, explain how to worm a play into the good graces of a director...", whose not going to let out a chuckle? (Especially if you're guilty). In addition, this book boasts some of the best writing that I've ever read. His writing is crisp, unmasked, and intellectually and visually stimulating. And as an added bonus, nine "I'm an ugly man smoking a cigarette" black and white photos precede the text. At $10, "The Theater And Its Double" won't disappoint.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Decimation and Re-birth, Aug 11 2000
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This review is from: The Theater and Its Double (Paperback)
Artaud's words are sharp and violent and essential. They are glass shards, they are bullets, they are flames from the primordial fire. Yes this work is about the theatre but it cuts to something more elemental; Artaud, like Whitman, like Camus, wants us to open our eyes. He seethes with disdain for Occidental complacency, yet he seeks to do something about it, to foment revolution. He desires to confront us with our tired and repugnant cowardice. I've never encountered a text like this, one that shakes and quavers and dazzles and combusts with such maniacal fervor, such cruel poetry and apocalyptic delirium. After reading Artaud, you cannot be the same.
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