To Elinor Fuchs, it is in the postmodern theatre that we witness the "death of the character" and the eradication of the plot. In this statement we are reminded of Barthes' announcement of the "death of the author", Foucault stating the "death of man" and Lyotard hailing the dissolution of metanarratives. As rigid categorization and structures of modernism collapse, eclecticism now characterizes postmodernism. But unlike Jameson's notion of pastiche and extreme consumerism of multi-national capitalism, critical postmodern theatre derives its theory from the post-structuralists' insight on semiotics. De Saussure laid bare the very construction of the human language exposing its structure of signs and codes. Taking off from this, Derrida's analysis of the subjectivity of man's meaning-making has furthered the invalidation of metanarratives. Now as the validity of the sign-signified and code-meaning constructs of languages are put into question, postmodernists are forced to investigate the language construction itself. Ultimately, we come to realize that meaning and signification is subjective and should be contextualized. With this, categorizing boundaries set by modernism collapse as well.
How do all these reflect in postmodern theatre?
Raymond Williams notion of the theatre convention explains this. Conventions in theatre according to Raymond Williams are methods such as figurative speech, stage blocking, songs or dance through which specific dramatic objectives are achieved. He pointed out how conventions in the theatre whether, performative techniques or literary devices, are characterized by its acceptability by the audience and its relations to the specific given standards. With this, he stressed the fact how dramatic conventions are maintained as terms upon which author, performers and audience agree to meet, so that the performance may be carried on. Nicole Boireau expounded on the concept of dramatic conventions through the Hamletesque metaphor of the 'Mousetrap'. From this, he claims that the truth can be accessed through the world of illusion; that it is only through theatricality that truth can be revealed. Theatre expresses reality through the use of artificial conventions. He explained that only through the reflective nature of drama and the dramatic conventions that truths presented in drama are validated . It is then through the same dramatic and theatrical conventions set as the medium in expressing truths, that the expressed truths can be validated. It is through the limitations and self-confined means of definition can the expressed truths substantiate.
Williams and Boireau's explanation is a profound manifestation of structuralist and post-structuralist concept of laying bare language and systems of signs and codes. Although rooted in the Classical and Modern Theatre tradition, this is a postmodern realization of what Linda Hutcheon calls the self-reflexive nature of postmodern theatre .
With the dissolution of a
'universal' language, postmodern theatre is but provoked to look into
historical and cultural contexts for a language to articulate itself. The same
characteristic is seen in other art forms.
Postmodern choreographers made dances about dance, inquiring on the very
core of movement vocabularies that gave birth to choreographical works on
walking, skipping, etc. Or experimented
on the various dance styles as seen in Twyla Tharp's combinations of jazz,
ballet and ballroom. In the
Postmodern theatre sees the various
cultural and historical traditions as a vast source of signs. Kaye describes
how postmodernism sees history as a store of signs available for postmodern theatre
practice. In a recent production of
Hamlet in
With the collapse of the modernist boundaries, postmodern theatre takes on pluralism and multiplicity in style, approach and over-all process. This has been reflected in various approaches to production. Another important postmodern theatre practice is the use of inter-text, or what Jameson calls a culture of quotations, where various texts could be used to comment on each other. Such is in a production of Romeo and Juliet, where the play ends with the closing monologue by Puck from A Midsummer Night's Dream. In Nick Pichay's musical version of the Oyayi ng Ulan, the character Dugong complained about the accumulating garbage in the ocean. He remarked that the worst kind of garbage is the postmodern poetry of new poets- which of course, includes the playwright of the play, Pichay himself.
With the similar collapse of the modernist notion of Aristotle's linearity and the Hegelian logic of cause and effect, postmodern theatre is characterized by multi-dimensionality and simultaneity. A simplified example of this is Maria Irene Fornes's Fefu and Her Friends where the audiences are divided into groups to see different scenes of the play happening in various places. Or in the seashore scene of the 2002 staging of Dulaang Habi's Sa Kaharian ng Araw, past and present converge with the appearance of Paolo's deceased parents in the same stage where Paolo lovingly recalls them. On the same space in the stage an actor fishes on one side, while another plays with a rain stick, while other actors waiting for their cue sit attentively on chairs onstage. Here, multi-dimensionality and simultaneity is not just seen in how the plot is (dis)arranged. Even the actors playing the characters go through different dimensions of performance and representation in the same time and space. The actor although dressed up for the character he is to portray sits on a chair on the side waiting for his cue, substantiate both as the actor and as the character. The person exist as both the actor and character simultaneously but in different dimensions - where at one point, while he waits for his cue he essentially is not part of the play but simultaneously, physically and intentionally, he is physically there.
As Fuchs sees the diminution of character and plot in postmodern theatre, she sees the other theatrical elements taking on equal importance with these elements. She sees that "each signifying element - lights, visual design, music, etc., as well as plot and character elements - stand to some degree as independent actor." She pointed out that the Aristotelian elements survived but their classical and modern structural hierarchies ceased to operate. This attitude in theatre production takes its roots from the Brechtian Epic Theatre. Brecht earlier on said: "Today we see the theatre being given absolute priority over actual plays. The theatre apparatus's priority is a priority of means of production... The Theatre can stage anything; it theatres it all" (Raymond Williams, p.280).
And as postmodern theatre see the "death of the author" (the playwright), the director now takes the central role as the theorist responsible for creating the language of a production.
Postmodern theatre is also
differentiated from the modern theatre with its mode-of-production. The Industrial Revolution and the idea of
mass-production and the div
This new paradigm in theatre production calls for a different attitude from the audience as well. In postmodern theatre, Aristotle's notion of catharsis comes to extreme obscurity in postmodern theatre. Aesthetic experience becomes completely dependent upon the meaning making process. The aesthetic experience that transpires in the postmodern process is closer to Kant's sublime. Unlike Aristotle's cathartic drama that succumbs its audience to empathizing attitude towards the mimetic illusion of classical and modern drama, Kant states that distance is necessary in achieving aesthetic pleasure. Brecht in turn, proposes 'complex seeing' in theatre: "Complex seeing must be practiced. Thinking above the flow of the play is more important than thinking from within the flow of the play" (Ibid., p281).
In as much as postmodern theatre is required to go through a dialogic process of taking theory into practice and back to theory for it to be able to express itself, postmodern audience then is also called to go through this process of meaning-making. Here, postmodern theatre forces its audience to always take on a critical stance in watching. Language-creation and meaning-making in postmodern theatre is never a simple one-on-one correspondence mode of cognition. With a wary stance towards subjectivity of language, postmodern productions then is manifested with recurring disruptions in its audience's cognitive process. John Orr sees this as intentional dis-recognition/mis-recognition and he notes that these are often used as dramatic-shock effects. The audience is provoked to figure out what is 'menacing' and 'strange" in familiar objects onstage and they are prodded to "translate back the strangeness, as a performed disguise of the metonymic, into something they truly recognize, knowing there is no complete translation" (John Orr, p.32) .
In the elusive nature of postmodernism as a theory, DiGaetani sees the importance of having a terminology that can serve as a handle. He noted that "it is wonderful to have a term like postmodernism to describe the art" (John DiGaetani, p. xv). To Fuchs, the theatre has indeed what we can call now postmodern and she asserts that the sooner we grasp its methods we are "immediately at a better vantage point from which to view what used to be called 'avant-garde' theatre" (Elinor Fuchs, p.171).
John DiGaetani. The Search for Postmodernism: Interviews with Contemporary Playwrights. Greenwood Press: New York, 1991.
Elinor Fuchs . Death of the Character. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, c.1996
John Orr. Tragicomedy and Contemporary Culture. Hong Kong: Macmillan Academic and Professional, Ltd., 1991
Raymond Williams. Drama from Ibsen to Brecht. Oxford University Press: New York, 1969 c. 1968.