(1) Our contextualist position has led us to the dramaturgical perspective.
(2) He was – and probably still is – our greatest dramaturg-director and champion of new work,” she tells me.
(3) has two historic roots: one root lies in the medical-natural-sciences tradition; the other in the dramaturgical i.e.
(4) Phenomenological analysis of respondents' accounts of everyday ailments generated concepts of 'the physical self', which expands interactive or dramaturgical concepts, and 'the health biography'.
(5) This article explores how the dramaturgical perspective of selected Theatre Rehearsal Technique (TRT) activities can be used as learning experiences in communication with this student population.
(6) This study uses the interpretive approach, particularly Goffman's dramaturgical approach, to further understand the objective of reminiscence and to see how the social element emphasized by the interpretive approach can in fact be the deciding factor in the consequent adjustment or maladjustment of the older person.
(7) The conductor Robin Ticciati walked out of a series of performances at the Zurich Opera after the dramaturg insisted on cutting all the Mozart recitative.
(8) Dramaturgical styles were also noted and typologized; these styles appear to comprise the acting out of sub-culturally desirable roles.
(9) We examine safer sex interventions using an interactionist form of dramaturgical analysis.
Dramaturgy
Definition:
(n.) The art of dramatic composition and representation.
Example Sentences:
(1) With preferential rates for artists and partnerships with the likes of Somerset House and the Royal Court, you’re likely to end up arguing over Brechtian dramaturgy or post-internet art in the lift.
(2) However reluctant Freud was about modern dramaturgy, his ideas had a profound effect on playwrights, such as Schnitzler and O'Neill, and through them was instrumental in freeing the theatre from its Victorian moral straitjacket.
(3) More specifically, drawing on the works of Erving Goffman on dramaturgy, and Elizabeth Burns on theatre, it makes some suggestions concerning nursing as a form of dramatic performance, and briefly attempts to relate this to concepts of praxis drawn from the writings of Hannah Arendt and critical social theorists.
(4) In contrast to Goffman's dramaturgy, which stresses the artifice of social relations and suggests a cynical view of human interactions, a critical theory of dramatic praxis introduces a normative dimension in which performance may become self-realizing and emancipatory as it aspires to the status of aesthetic praxis.