2 resultados para Frank, Robert

em Repositório Científico do Instituto Politécnico de Lisboa - Portugal


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Esta reflexão concretiza o Trabalho de Projecto que consiste na criação e encenação de um concerto intitulado Still Frank, com textos originais do poeta e dramaturgo Daniel Jonas e música de Rui Lima, Sérgio Martins e Pedro Cardoso. O espectáculo está inserido no programa da companhia Teatro Bruto e foi apresentado no TeCA – Teatro Carlos Alberto, em Dezembro de 2010, na cidade do Porto. Pretendo com a criação deste objecto cénico reflectir sobre a dualidade intrínseca ao processo de criação, na relação do criador com a criatura, do encenador com o espectáculo, do actor com a personagem, do real com a ficção. A criação como algo que, sendo proveniente do indivíduo, posteriormente ganha forma numa entidade autónoma que sobrevive ao sujeito a partir do qual se originou e se duplicou e com o qual partilha uma identificação. O conceito de duplo, de monstro e o mito «Frankenstein» estarão na base de toda a pesquisa e fundamentação para a criação do espectáculo Still Frank e, na minha reflexão teórica, devidamente distanciada do objecto cénico criado. Mas este trabalho não se detém somente na análise e reflexão do processo de encenação de Still Frank; ele consubstancia o meu percurso enquanto encenadora, cenógrafa e figurinista, indissociável do projecto artístico da companhia Teatro Bruto, nascida nos anos noventa, na cidade do Porto, e do trabalho de partilha e identificação artística de um núcleo de criadores com quem tenho colaborado.

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The legacy of nineteenth century social theory followed a “nationalist” model of society, assuming that analysis of social realities depends upon national boundaries, taking the nation-state as the primary unit of analysis, and developing the concept of methodological nationalism. This perspective regarded the nation-state as the natural - and even necessary - form of society in modernity. Thus, the constitution of large cities, at the end of the 19th century, through the intense flows of immigrants coming from diverse political and linguistic communities posed an enormous challenge to all social research. One of the most significant studies responding to this set of issues was The Immigrant Press and its Control, by Robert E. Park, one of the most prominent American sociologists of the first half of the 20th century. The Immigrant Press and its Control was part of a larger project entitled Americanization Studies: The Acculturation of Immigrant Group into American Society, funded by the Carnagie Corporation following World War I, taking as its goal to study the so-called “Americanization methods” during the 1920s. This paper revisits that particular work by Park to reveal how his detailed analysis of the role of the immigrant press overcame the limitations of methodological nationalism. By granting importance to language as a tool uniting each community and by showing how the strength of foreign languages expressed itself through the immigrant press, Park demonstrated that the latter produces a more ambivalent phenomenon than simply the assimilation of immigrants. On the one hand, the immigrant press served as a connecting force, driven by the desire to preserve the mother tongue and culture while at the same time awakening national sentiments that had, until then, remained diffuse. Yet, on the other hand, it facilitated the adjustment of immigrants to the American context. As a result, Park’s work contributes to our understanding of a particular liminal moment inherent within many intercultural contexts, the space between emigrant identity (emphasizing the country of origin) and immigrant identity (emphasizing the newly adopted country). His focus on the role played by media in the socialization of immigrant groups presaged later work on this subject by communication scholars. Focusing attention on Park’s research leads to other studies of the immigrant experience from the same period (e.g., Thomas & Znaniecki, The Polish Peasant in Europe and America), and also to insights on multi-presence and interculturality as significant but often overlooked phenomena in the study of immigrant socialization.