The political promise of choreography in performance and/as research: First Physical Theatre Company's manifesto and repertory, 1993-2015

dc.contributor.advisorGordon, Gary
dc.contributor.advisorKatrak, Ketu H
dc.contributor.authorFinestone-Praeg, Juanita
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-04T14:23:34Z
dc.date.issued2020
dc.description.abstractThis study redefines the political in dance by drawing on the scholarly concept of the "choreopolitical" (André Lepecki) and extending it into analysing related concepts such as the "postdramatic" (Hans-Thies Lehmann), performance and/as research, among others from Performance Studies scholarship as well as from First Physical Theatre Company's pioneering legacy of production, pedagogy and research in making Phyical Theatre performance. Following from the notion that performance is both a site and a method of study/knowing, the research invites a rethinking of the relationship between art (performance), epistemology and the political, in the sense that performance becomes a way, not of simply re-presenting the political but, as its own way of knowing, actively questioning the very categories on which the political is premised. The argument for Physical Theatre as having nascent potential to invoke what I call "the power of the small" is analysed as a choreopolitical method and community of practice that has a generative capacity to produce the "intimate revolts" (Julia Kristeva) or body of questions that can perform the imaginative curiosities/forms required to create provocative, subversive, ethical, reflexive and charged performance. My argument is supported by critical commentary, insight, choreological analysis and reflection on the dramaturgical strategies and choreopolitics of selected commissioned choreographers and dance forms that extended FPTC's manifesto and production between 1993 and 2015. My project has the following three goals: (i) to contextualise, conceptualise and identify key issues in the identity, pedagogy and performance ethos of Physical Theatre as a performance philosophy and form; (ii) to engage critically with the praxis of Physical Theatre within the contextual, cultural, historical and political relationships between Physical Theatre and other performance practices in South Africa; and (iii) to document, analyse and interpret selected claims, works and performance processes from the archive of FPTC's repertory and training manifesto from 1993 to 2015. The research evaluates the political significance and consequence of FPTC's heritage and legacy problematising constraints, possibilities, tensions, failures and proposing the hope of imaginative entanglements with practising freedoms.
dc.description.degreeDoctoral thesis
dc.description.degreePhD
dc.format.extent332 pages
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.identifier.otherhttp://hdl.handle.net/10962/149373
dc.identifier.urihttps://researchrepository.ru.ac.za/handle/123456789/7130
dc.languageEnglish
dc.publisherRhodes University, Faculty of Humanities, Department of Drama
dc.rightsFinestone-Praeg, Juanita
dc.subjectChoreography -- Political aspects
dc.subjectDance -- South Africa -- Makhanda
dc.subjectDance -- Political aspects
dc.subjectPerformance art -- South Africa -- Makhanda
dc.subjectPerformance art -- History and criticism
dc.subjectPerformance art -- Research
dc.subjectPerformance art -- Study and teaching
dc.subjectPerformance art -- Philosophy
dc.subjectExperimental theater -- South Africa -- Makhanda
dc.subjectExperimental theater -- History and criticism
dc.subjectPolitical art -- South Africa -- Makhanda
dc.subjectFirst Physical Theatre Company
dc.subjectFirst Physical Theatre Company -- History and criticism
dc.titleThe political promise of choreography in performance and/as research: First Physical Theatre Company's manifesto and repertory, 1993-2015
dc.typeAcademic thesis

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