Skip to product information
1 of 1

On Repetition

Regular price £82.95
Sale price £82.95 Regular price £0.00
Sale Sold out
On Repetition aims to unpack the different uses and functions of repetition within contemporary performance, dance practices, craft and writing. The collection, edited by Eirini Kartsaki, explores ...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 15 July 2016
View Product Details
On Repetition aims to unpack the different uses and functions of repetition within contemporary performance, dance practices, craft and writing. The collection, edited by Eirini Kartsaki, explores repetition in relation to intimacy, laughter, technology, familiarity and fear – proposing a new vocabulary for understanding what is at stake in works that repeat. Drawing on psychoanalysis, philosophy, linguistics, sociology and performance studies – and employing case studies from a range of practices – the essays presented here combine to form a unique interdisciplinary exploration of the functions of repetition in contemporary culture.
files/i.png Icon
Price: £82.95
Pages: 225
Publisher: Intellect Books
Imprint: Intellect Books
Publication Date: 15 July 2016
Trim Size: 9.00 X 7.00 in
ISBN: 9781783205776
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:

ART / General, The arts: general topics, LITERARY CRITICISM / General, Literature: history and criticism

REVIEWS Icon

This edited volume frames repetition as a fundamental and dynamic dimension of Western cultural production. In 11 essays that engage with white Euro-American theatre, dance, performance art, stand-up comedy, visual art, craft, film, and poetry, contributors differently explore and enact the enduring tensions that mark repetition as a de/stabilizing force in the constitution of art, subjectivity, and social life. A unifying theme is the pleasure and difficulty of repetition’s returns. For example, Emma Bennett engages with repetition as a methodology to read and re-read the tension of waiting again and again for the punchline in Stewart Lee’s rambling, repetitive joke “The Rap Singers”; Alice Barnaby demonstrates that the repetitive, seemingly “pointless” domestic pastime of copying images through pin-pricking was a creative and critical practice of empiricism; and editor Eirini Kartsaki’s contribution ruminates on three examples of Books 197 subjects who repeatedly return to the same event, even as they enact a desire for and fear of the end of this return. These pieces point to the formal strength of this work: each chapter repeats and revises repetition as a concept and method, performatively undoing the reader’s attempts to resolve the question of repetition with each iteration.

Persisting Forever: Introducing Repetition 
Eirini Kartsaki
 
Chapter 1 - Of Secret Signals, Absent Masters and the Trembling of the Contours: 15Walter Benjamin, Yvonne Rainer and the Repeatability of Gesture
Swen Steinhäuser
 
Chapter 2 - All the Home’s a Stage: Uncanny Encounters Between Auditorium and Oikos 
Alan Read
 
Chapter 3 - Repetition as Technology of the Numinous in Performance: The Artist Is Present by Marina Abramovic´
Silvia Battista
 
Chapter 4 - When Is a Joke not a Joke? Reading (and Re-reading) Stewart Lee’s ‘The Rap Singers’ 
Emma Bennett
 
Chapter 5 - The Crying Channel 
Claire Hind and Gary Winters
 
Chapter 6 -The Cyclical Pleasures and Deaths of Symbolization: How to Become 117 a Cupcake/The Famous’ Adaptation of Frankenstein 
Lauren Barri Holstein
 
Chapter 7 - A Pointless Pastime? Early Nineteenth-Century Pin-Prick Imagery
Alice Barnaby
 
Chapter 8 - Repeated Acts of Intimacy and Harm in Andrea Brady’s Mutability: Scripts for Infancy 
Gareth Farmer
 
Chapter 9 -‘I Was Not HEARD’: Trauma and Articulation in the Poetry of Geraldine Monk 
Linda Kemp
 
Chapter 10 - Déjà-vu, Doubles and Dread: The Uncanny and Christopher Smith’s Triangle 
Ruth McPhee
 
Chapter 11 - Farewell to Farewell: Impossible Endings and Unfinished Finitudes 
Eirini Kartsaki
 
Afterword: Repetition or Recognition? 
Clare Foster