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2017 | 66 | 1-2(261-262) | 199-208

Article title

„Żadnej metafizyki. Idioci!” Teatr postdramatyczny – ateizm – polityka

Selected contents from this journal

Title variants

EN
“No Metaphysics. Idiots!” Postdramatic Theatre, Atheism, and Politics

Languages of publication

Abstracts

EN
In the article “‘No Metaphysics. Idiots!’” Marcin Kościelniak undertakes a reading of Tadeusz Różewicz’s open theatre, particularly The Interrupted Act and The Card Index, in accordance with the sequence defined in the subtitle: postdramatic theatre, atheism, and politics. Following a suggestion put forth by Mateusz Borowski and Małgorzata Sugiera that we look at the theatrical project underlying The Interrupted Act from the perspective of postdramatic theatre, the author points out that Hans-Thiers Lehmann’s conception of the postdramatic is based not only on aesthetic but also on political criteria, and the latter are as important and fundamental as the former. This makes it possible to pose the question about the epistemological and axiological criteria underlying the decay of dramatic form in Różewicz’s open theatre. Citing passages from Różewicz’s poetry and referring to interpretations by Ryszard Nycz and Aleksander Fiut, the author proposes that we see the political grounds of Różewicz’s postdramatic theatre in his atheism. Following this lead, the author views the central aesthetic categories of both postdramatic theatre and Różewicz’s open theatre, i.e. “the here and now,” reality in place of an illusion, as political gestures as well (rejection of metaphysics, materialism). In this light, the “brutal realism” proclaimed by Różewicz is as much about drawing the theatrical spectacle closer to performance as it is about the lack of transcendence. The author seizes upon the opinions expressed by Jan Błoński and Małgorzata Dziewulska who accused Różewicz of being too fond of decay, as it is precisely the most valuable quality of his creative work. “Różewicz as an atheist, materialist, and realist—this is a stupendous source of his art,” Kościelniak states and proposes that we reclaim the subversive potential of Różewicz’s theatre, which consists in its being radically apart from the dominant Romantic and Christian tradition of Polish theatre.

Year

Volume

66

Issue

Pages

199-208

Physical description

Contributors

  • Uniwerstet Jagielloński

References

  • M. Borowski, M. Sugiera, Między przedstawieniami. „Akt przerywany” jako efekt strategii autora-rapsoda, [w:] Re:Wizje Różewiczowskie, red. J. Puzyna-Chojka, Gdańsk 2008.
  • T. Drewnowski, Walka o oddech. O pisarstwie Tadeusza Różewicza, Warszawa 1990.
  • M. Dziewulska, Teatr zdradzonego przymierza, Warszawa 1985.
  • A. Fiut, Po śmierci Boga (o twórczości Tadeusza Różewicza), „Teksty Drugie” 1993 nr 3.
  • H. T. Lehmann, Teatr postdramatyczny, przekł. D. Sajewska i M. Sugiera, Kraków 2004.
  • Z. Majchrowski, „Poezja jak otwarta rana” (czytając Różewicza), Warszawa 1993.
  • G. Niziołek, Ciało i słowo. Szkice o teatrze Tadeusza Różewicza, Kraków 2004.
  • R. Nycz, Literatura jako trop rzeczywistości, Kraków 2001.
  • T. Różewicz, K. Braun, Języki teatru, Wrocław 1989.
  • Słownik dramatu nowoczesnego i najnowszego, red. J. P. Sarrazac, przekł. M. Borowski, M. Sugiera, Kraków 2007.

Document Type

Publication order reference

Identifiers

YADDA identifier

bwmeta1.element.desklight-f68b8a02-e8fe-4773-b95a-abf1de61ec2a
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