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Europe at War in Post-war Europe. Performing Greek Tragedies, Comedies and European Identity.

Description du projet

Une histoire de la guerre sur scène dans l’Europe de l’après-guerre

Les productions théâtrales de pièces dramatiques de la Grèce antique cherchent, parfois consciemment, à construire une identité européenne distincte. Le projet EWPWE, financé par l’UE, explorera la manière dont les metteurs en scène contemporains d’Europe occidentale de la Seconde Guerre mondiale au Royaume-Uni, en Allemagne, en France, en Belgique et en Suisse représentent la guerre à l’aide des textes dramatiques de la Grèce antique. Le projet étudiera comment ces représentations remettent en question et tentent de comprendre l’identité européenne. Il couvrira les approches dramatiques passées, présentes et futures à travers des recherches d’archives, l’observation de productions contemporaines et des ateliers créatifs avec des étudiants d’Oxford, de Paris et de Liège. En tant que bourse, le projet sert de passerelle entre les carrières universitaires et artistiques dans le domaine des études théâtrales.

Objectif

This project will examine the multiple ways in which contemporary western European theatre directors (in the UK, Germany, France, Belgium and Switzerland) have staged and continue to stage war with the help of ancient Greek dramatic scripts from the WW2 onwards. I will argue that such performances question and try to understand European identity. The three strands of this interdisciplinary project (in between Classical Reception Studies and Theatre Studies and mixing practice and theory) will cover past, present and prospective dramatic approaches of this question: 1/ academic research (archives, libraries, interviews) to analyse past performances; 2/ observation of contemporary productions in rehearsals; 3/ creative labs with students from Oxford, Paris and Liège to highlight how young Europeans are dealing with those materials. This will allow to propose a history of war on stage in post-war Europe, told through productions of ancient plays that seek, sometimes consciously indeed, to build a distinctly European identity. The fellowship will take place at the APGRD (Archive of Performances of Greek and Roman Drama, Faculty of Classics, UOXF) that is the best environment to manage such a project given its world-class database and archive of performances of Greek and Roman Drama that I will use and contribute to. This indisciplinary project will grant me the opportunity to work with some of the best researchers in Classical Reception Studies in the world (particularly with my supervisor Fiona Macintosh), strenghtening my academic network. I will improve my skills in this field and also in general European research management to become a mature researcher in Classical Reception Studies (since I have a PhD in Theatre Studies). Moreover, since I already have an extended experienc as a stage-director, this research-as-creation project will bridge my academic and artistic carreers and put me at the forefront of Theatre Studies.

Régime de financement

MSCA-IF-EF-ST - Standard EF

Coordinateur

THE CHANCELLOR, MASTERS AND SCHOLARS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD
Contribution nette de l'UE
€ 212 933,76
Adresse
WELLINGTON SQUARE UNIVERSITY OFFICES
OX1 2JD Oxford
Royaume-Uni

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Région
South East (England) Berkshire, Buckinghamshire and Oxfordshire Oxfordshire
Type d’activité
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Liens
Coût total
€ 212 933,76