An exploration of the uncomfortable connections among performances in life, art, and politics
“All the world’s a stage,” declares the melancholy Jacques in Shakespeare’s As You Like It. Today that’s an unhappy thought. A cluster of demagogues has recently dominated the public realm through their powers as actors; they are brilliant performers. More unsettling, the demagogue, the dancer, and the musician all share the same nonverbal realm of bodily gestures, lighting and blocking, costuming, and stage architecture. So, too, the roles and rituals of everyday life and everyday acting can be malign or sublime, repressive or liberating. Performing constitutes one art—an ambiguous art.
In this book, the acclaimed sociologist Richard Sennett explores uncomfortable connections among performances in life, art, and politics. He draws on his own early career as a professional cellist as well as histories both Western and non-Western. He is not a pessimist; at the end of his study, he shows how this ambiguous art might become more ethical.
Richard Sennett is the Centennial Professor of Sociology at the London School of Economics and former University Professor of the Humanities at New York University. He lives in London and New York City.
“Urgent, penetrating, moving. Another masterwork from a master thinker.”—Ian Bostridge, author of Song and Self: A Singer’s Reflections on Music and Performance
“A masterpiece from one of the most important cultural theorists of our time. The Performer is, at once, a memoir, an investigation, a sociological treatise, and a manifesto for rethinking humanity's next act.”—Eric Klinenberg, Helen Gould Shepard Professor in the Social Sciences, New York University
“An inspiring essay on performance and ritual, packed with insights. Essential reading for anyone interested in public space and the city.”—Anna Minton, author of Big Capital: Who Is London For?
“Richard Sennett calls on his vast knowledge of theater and performance to argue for the social uses of civility—and against the degradation of public social space brought by demagogues such as Donald Trump. This is a book that ranges widely while speaking forcefully to our current needs.”—Peter Brooks, Yale University
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