Audio drama is overlooked by philosophy even though it raises many philosophical questions. It seems to be a contradiction: drama is a form of showing yet the exemplary form of showing a world—visual representation—is absent from it. What kinds of world do we find if we concentrate on what is revealed through sound and the voice? According to fans of the medium, ‘the best pictures are in the head’ but might its potency be more fully realized if we consider that the best pictures are in the body?This book shows how phenomenology addresses these questions and provides new ways of theorizing audio drama. It transpires that the phenomenologist and the audio dramatist share the same predicament: how is a world going to make itself apparent to us or to our audience when our materials—sound and the voice—are only available when we are active and noisy in our environment? The book gives a clear account of phenomenology’s rethinking of embodiment, technology and causality, and how it enables the drawing of relations between audio drama, sound art and audio fiction. Instead of contradiction, sound and the voice emerge as principal expressions of dramatic structure and human being-in-the-world, and audio drama is shown to be an art form that manifests the power of causality to enrich aesthetic sensibility.The Phenomenology of Audio Drama will appeal to philosophers working in aesthetics and modern European philosophy, and to theorists and practitioners within the fields of audio drama, sound art and performance.
Clive Cazeaux is Professor of Aesthetics at Cardiff Metropolitan University, Wales, UK. He is the author of Art, Research, Philosophy (Routledge 2017) and Metaphor and Continental Philosophy: From Kant to Derrida (Routledge 2007), and the editor of The Continental Aesthetics Reader (Routledge 2011, 2nd edition).
Introduction 1. The bond between ‘audio’ and ‘drama’ in Aristotle’s mimesis 2. Out of our minds and into the world 3. The phenomenology of a resonant radio-body 4. The invitational character of audio drama 5. Questions concerning technology for postdramatic audio drama 6. On not coming to terms with indeterminate sound 7. The technological disclosure of a world in postdramatic audio drama 8. Becoming a voice against narration Conclusion
"With this remarkable book, Cazeaux opens up a vibrant new branch in the study of audio drama. It is destined to become a cornerstone book that reshapes how we approach audio drama by revealing it to be one of the richest and most neglected modern art forms from a philosophical point of view."Neil Verma, Northwestern University, USA
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