Number of the records: 1  

Günter Brus. A walk through totality

  1. 1.
    SYSNO ASEP0567852
    Document TypeJ - Journal Article
    R&D Document TypeJournal Article
    Subsidiary JČlánek ve SCOPUS
    TitleGünter Brus. A walk through totality
    Author(s) Kubart, Tomáš (UCL-M) RID, ORCID
    Source TitleTheatralia : revue současného myšlení o divadelní kultuře - ISSN 1803-845X
    Roč. 25, č. 2 (2022), s. 15-40
    Number of pages26 s.
    Languageeng - English
    CountryCZ - Czech Republic
    KeywordsViennese Actionism ; Günter Brus ; performance art ; biopolitics ; Trauma Studies ; Austrian post-war art ; Fascist Man ; post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)
    Subject RIVAJ - Letters, Mass-media, Audiovision
    OECD categoryPerforming arts studies (Musicology, Theater science, Dramaturgy)
    Method of publishingOpen access
    Institutional supportUCL-M - RVO:68378068
    EID SCOPUS85151506887
    DOI https://doi.org/10.5817/TY2022-2-2
    AnnotationThis study focuses on examining a specific artwork of a member of the Austrian action group of Viennese Actionism, Günter Brus through the prism of Trauma Studies. The research question of how the trauma of World War II expressed itself in the art of Günter Brus encompasses a focus on three sub-areas based on the nature and definition of trauma and following neurosis/psychosis: individual trauma (e.g., childhood trauma), societal trauma (a consequence of WWII), and the return of trauma if it has not been consistently processed. The experience of WWII left traumas in the generation of artists such as Brus (e.g., his experience of bombing at an early age) that were individual, society-wide (the complicity of the whole Austrian society in the Nazi crimes and the Shoa), and/or the traumas caused by some recurring trauma. According to British theatrologist Patrick Duggan, trauma on the individual level is doubled upon recurrence, which is similar to the conclusion at which German researcher Gerald Schröder arrives when he writes about the Wiederholungstrauma of a society on the whole. When the level of social traumatisation reaches a borderline level, it manifests itself through various valves, including artistic ones. Günter Brus became such a materialisation of the repetition of trauma, a living reminder, literally walking through the streets of Vienna during his event Vienna Walk. The study introduces and describes the nature of such trauma in the artwork of the Austrian post-war artist through the framework of Duggan's methodology coupled with trauma-related symptomatology.
    WorkplaceInstitute of Czech Literature
    ContactPavla Hartmanová, hartmanova@ucl.cas.cz ; Veronika Zemanová, zemanova@ucl.cas.cz, asep@ucl.cas.cz, Tel.: 222 828 135
    Year of Publishing2023
    Electronic addresshttps://digilib.phil.muni.cz/en/handle/11222.digilib/digilib.77245
Number of the records: 1  

  This site uses cookies to make them easier to browse. Learn more about how we use cookies.