Was performance important to Deleuze? Is Deleuze important to
performance; to its practical, as well as theoretical, research? What
are the implications of Deleuze's philosophy of difference, process and
becoming, for Performance Studies, a field in which many continue to
privilege the notion of performance as representation, as anchored by
its imitation of an identity: 'the world', 'the play', 'the self'?
Deleuze and Performance is a collection of new essays dedicated to
Deleuze's writing on theatre and to the productivity of his philosophy
for (re)thinking performance. This book provides rigorous analyses of
Deleuze's writings on theatre practitioners such as Artaud, Beckett and
Carmelo Bene, as well as offering innovative readings of historical and
contemporary performance including performance art, dance, new media
performance, theatre and opera, which use Deleuze's concepts in exciting
new ways. Can philosophy follow Deleuze in overcoming the antitheatrical
tradition embedded in its history, perhaps even reconsidering what it
means to think in the light of the embodied insights of performance's
practitioners? Experts from the fields of Performance Studies and
Deleuze Studies come together in this volume and strive to examine these
and other issues in a manner that will be challenging, yet accessible to
students and established scholars alike.