little_red_fox
New Member
- Joined
- Oct 13, 2004
- Messages
- 28
Just wanted some help to clear this up...
Basically for my response I'm planning on referring to at least two 'readings'
Are productions counted as readings - as in the producers reading?
Or should I be looking at the 'readings' as in critical responses/interpretations as in Bradley - traditional aristolean tragedy etc, feminist i.e McLuskie...don't know if this makes sense
For example if I raised issues about Bradley's reading based upon the Aristolean tragedy, which talks about he idea of a fortune wheel where the protagonist starts at the top, but as the wheel turns they are lead rapidly to their downfall etc, and then supported this idea with evidence from the text i.e quotes "bound upon a wheel of fire" and egs of events, would it also be appropriate to use examples of how productions have shown this (classify productions or aspects of them under certain readings) such as Brook's production (although absurdist) where the camera shows Edmund upside down in the bottom of the frame as he says "the wheel has come full circle" before he dies, while Edar is upright in he top of the frame?
Just confused what to do with productions...do you just use them as evidence of how different readings have been shown?
Hope you understand what I'm trying to say
...Also one of the practice questions I've come across says basically "A ... piece of social commentry... universal themes etc...but does it really work as a play?
How would you answer this? Because to me anyway the readings show the depth and universality of the play, but to determine whether it 'works' as a play you would really need to look at the actual staging and actual productions - so just refering to critical interpretations wouldn't really cover the question?
Basically for my response I'm planning on referring to at least two 'readings'
Are productions counted as readings - as in the producers reading?
Or should I be looking at the 'readings' as in critical responses/interpretations as in Bradley - traditional aristolean tragedy etc, feminist i.e McLuskie...don't know if this makes sense
For example if I raised issues about Bradley's reading based upon the Aristolean tragedy, which talks about he idea of a fortune wheel where the protagonist starts at the top, but as the wheel turns they are lead rapidly to their downfall etc, and then supported this idea with evidence from the text i.e quotes "bound upon a wheel of fire" and egs of events, would it also be appropriate to use examples of how productions have shown this (classify productions or aspects of them under certain readings) such as Brook's production (although absurdist) where the camera shows Edmund upside down in the bottom of the frame as he says "the wheel has come full circle" before he dies, while Edar is upright in he top of the frame?
Just confused what to do with productions...do you just use them as evidence of how different readings have been shown?
Hope you understand what I'm trying to say
...Also one of the practice questions I've come across says basically "A ... piece of social commentry... universal themes etc...but does it really work as a play?
How would you answer this? Because to me anyway the readings show the depth and universality of the play, but to determine whether it 'works' as a play you would really need to look at the actual staging and actual productions - so just refering to critical interpretations wouldn't really cover the question?