Performance Costume: New Perspectives and Methods

Regular price
£24.99
Sale price
£24.99
Regular price
£24.99
Sold out
Unit price
per 

Author: Pantouvaki, Professor Sofia (Aalto University, Finland); McNeil, Peter (University of Technology, S

Format: Paperback / softback

Pages: 424

Publication date:

Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

For books the EU representative is usually the publisher or authorised agent. Contact details for EU representatives are provided within the book or its packaging. For most titles, this information is provided on the imprint page of the book.

If you have any questions regarding product safety or you need assistance in contacting the authorised EU representative for a book or play you have purchased, please contact us.

Details

by Sofia Pantouvaki and Peter McNeil

Costume is an active agent for performance-making; it is a material object that embodies ideas shaped through collaborative creative work. A new focus in recent years on research in the area of costume has connected this practice in vital and new ways with theories of the body and embodiment, design practices, artistic and other forms of collaboration. Costume, like fashion and dress, is now viewed as an area of dynamic social significance and not simply as passive reflector of a pre-conceived social state or practice. This book offers new approaches to the study of costume, as well as fresh insights into the better-understood frames of historical, theoretical, practice-based and archival research into costume for performance.

This anthology draws on the experience of a global group of established researchers as well as emerging voices.

Below is a list of just some of the things it achieves:

  1. Introduces diverse perspectives, innovative new research methods and approaches for researching design and the costumed body in performance.
  2. Contributes towards a new understanding of how costume actually performs in time and space.
  3. Offers new insights into existing practices, as well as creating a space of connection between practitioners and researchers from design, the humanities and social sciences.