TY - BOOK AU - Scheer,Anna Teresa TI - Christoph Schlingensief: staging chaos, performing politics and theatrical phantasmagoria T2 - Methuen drama engage SN - 9781350001053 AV - PN2658.S345 S34 2018 U1 - 792.02/33092 23 PY - 2018/// CY - London, UK, New York, NY PB - Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing Plc KW - Schlingensief, Christoph, KW - Politics and literature KW - Germany KW - History KW - 20th century KW - 21st century KW - Political plays, German KW - History and criticism KW - Experimental drama KW - Performance art KW - German drama N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; Introduction: Schlingensief, the all-round artist -- Beyond theatre: avant-garde influences, the Schlingensief "family" and German politics in the 1980s -- Schlingensief and German reunification: from independent filmmaker to Volksbühne rebel -- Re-playing the sixties: Rocky Dutschke '68 and performative activism -- The Berlin Republic: postcolonial amnesia, contemporary German politics, and Wagner as "light comedy" -- Spectres of fascism and a theatrical "ghosting": Hamlet/Nazi-line -- Art and terror: a church in cyberspace and a utopian social project -- Conclusion: the theatrical phantasmagorias of Christoph Schlingensief N2 - "This is the first book to focus specifically on the late German artist Christoph Schlingensief's theatre work, which subversively merges art, politics and everyday life to imbue his productions both inside and outside the theatre with a re-energized concept of the political in art. The book proposes the pluralistic concept of the phantasmagoria as a means to decoding Schlingensief's unique theatrical vision and examines how it achieves its political radicality, yet retains a critical ambivalence in regard to an explicitly political intention. Scheer traces Schlingensief's artistic lineage as a filmmaker with no formal training in theatre, whose work does not correspond to theoretical frameworks such as postdramatic theatre, Regietheater, or established categories of political theatre such as Brechtian, community, and agit-prop theatre. She explores how his work instead draws upon the highly performative gestures of the historical and post-Cold War avant-gardes as well the happenings and event-based practices of the sixties. Comprehensive case studies of six diverse theatrical and activist events are offered to demonstrate both the immediacy of Schlingensief's response to contemporary social and political events and his use of a range of artistic influences and different genres: Rocky Dutschke '68 (1996), Save Capitalism: Throw the Money Away! (1999) The Berlin Republic - or the Ring in Africa (1999) Hamlet (2001), Atta Atta - Art Has Broken Out! (2003) and the Church of Fear (2003)"-- ER -