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How traditional arts are used and adapted by film? In what ways do they correspond and cooperate as structural elements supporting a fully coherent piece of film? These fundamental questions open many areas of film research. The paper examines three competing definitions of cinema as polimorfic art and gives overview of various versions and modes of coexistence of arts in film. Author argues that ambivalence is evidenced between policy of adapting established arts and policy of modelling new art by filmmakers. The role of film practice in orchestrating individual strategies is used to highlight this ambivalence. Aspirations good for one separate art can be wrong for film as specific medium and kind of art. „The play’s the thing”. As far as symbiosis of many different arts is important for cinema, culture of adaptation remains key question in film practice and filmmaking.
PL
Dancing muses. Cinema and the correspondance of arts How traditional arts are used and adapted by film? In what ways do they correspond and cooperate as structural elements supporting a fully coherent piece of film? These fundamental questions open many areas of film research. The paper examines three competing definitions of cinema as polimorfic art and gives overview of various versions and modes of coexistence of arts in film. Author argues that ambivalence is evidenced between policy of adapting established arts and policy of modelling new art by filmmakers. The role of film practice in orchestrating individual strategies is used to highlight this ambivalence. Aspirations good for one separate art can be wrong for film as specific medium and kind of art. „The play’s the thing”. As far as symbiosis of many different arts is important for cinema, culture of adaptation remains key question in film practice and filmmaking.
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EN
Actors’ ensembleThis article analyses how actors’ ensembles function as an alternative to the star system of actors’ participation in film. 
PL
Actors’ ensembleThis article analyses how actors’ ensembles function as an alternative to the star system of actors’ participation in film.
Pamiętnik Teatralny
|
2024
|
vol. 73
|
issue 2
189-226
PL
Tematem tekstu jest przedstawienie Kalevala – fragmenty niepisane Teatru Węgajty / Projektu terenowego, które w 2000/2001 roku otworzyło nowy etap działalności Teatru Węgajty. Spektakl stanowił kontynuację wyborów tematycznych, estetycznych oraz związanych z metodą pracy Teatru Wiejskiego „Węgajty” a zarazem otwierał nowe drogi poszukiwań. Elementem w szczególny sposób transformującym pracę i wnoszącym nową jakość w towarzyszącą jej refleksję była obecność w zespole Trevora Hilla – aktora a równocześnie antropologa. Analiza autoetnograficznego opisu pracy nad Kalevalą autorstwa Hilla pozwala wyodrębnić obecne w nim trzy wymiary funkcjonowania autoetnografii: jako nowatorskiej techniki pozyskania informacji, jako metody badawczej (autoetnografia analityczna) oraz jako wyznacznika nowego paradygmatu wytwarzania wiedzy o życiu społecznym i jego uczestnikach (autoetnografia ewokatywna). Zastosowanie metody autoetnograficznej w badaniach nad Teatrem Węgajty pozwoliło dotrzeć do informacji trudnych do uzyskania w inny sposób, w tym dotyczących doświadczeń i procesów wewnętrznych aktora.
EN
The text discusses the performance Kalevala The Unwritten Fragments of the Węgajty Theatre / Field Project, which in 2000/2001 opened a new phase in the theatre’s activity. The performance continued the thematic, aesthetic, and method choices of the Węgajty Village Theatre, while also opening new paths of exploration. The group’s work was particularly transformed, and a new quality was brought into its accompanying reflection, by the presence of the actor and anthropologist Trevor Hill. The analysis of Hill’s autoethnographic description of their work on Kalevala allows us to distinguish three dimensions of autoethnography: as an innovative technique of obtaining information, as a research method (analytical autoethnography), and as an indicator of a new paradigm of producing knowledge about social life and its participants (evocative autoethnography).The use of the autoethnographic method in research on the Węgajty Theatre made it possible to access information that is otherwise difficult to obtain, including the actor’s experiences and internal processes.
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