My research wanders around in the overlap of theatre and religion. Broadly, I think theatre and religion operate similarly and accomplish similar aims. While doing other things, as well, both develop the conditions out of which emerges heightened experience, or what psychologist Abraham Maslow called âpeak experienceâ. A shared device by which both phenomena make heightened experiences available is role-play. Theatre and religion offer adjunct identities, through the playing of which people bring ideal realities into existence. By playing the âHamletâ role, or by playing the devotee role, a person may come to experience Hamletâs world, or the world imagined by Christianity or Hinduism or What-have-you-ism.
Which is not to say that my work argues that religion is fake. My correlation of theatre and religion does not accept that theatre is fake. Aristotle felt that he had to reduce theatre to mimesis in order to rescue the art from Plato, who thought weâd be better off without theatre. But Aristotle was wrong. Playing roles does transform people, and theatre does throw the world into confusion. Plato, in fact, was right, and we should be afraid of theatre. Very afraid.
Currently my work is concerned with theatre audiences and with private devotion. I would argue that theatre audiences that do have some kind of heightened experienceâand if you cried at the end of Old Yeller, you know what I meanâapproach that experience by taking on and playing a role that anticipates the materialization of that experience. To some extent, I am following Hjalmar SundĂŠnâs ârole theory of religious experienceâ, here. But I would add that elements of cognitive theory, narrative theories of personal identity, and existentialism contribute significantly to understanding how we experience reality as something other (or more) than what reality should be.
My first book examined râs lÎlâ theatre in Vrindavan, India, which exists almost exclusively to facilitate devotion to the divine Krishna. For actors and audiences, together, râs lÎlâ performances do not merely represent (or imitate) Krishna, but manifest Krishna, and this religious tradition is rather up front in the way that it encourages and values role-playing as genuine devotional activity.
My second bookâa biography of Brigham Youngâwas a bit of a detour. If Iâm the only person who learned something from that book, the effort was still well worth it.
My most recent book concerns play. Generally, I think we donât appreciate the transformative force of play. The book argues that the phenomena that we call, variously, âreligionâ and âtheatreâ are not altogether different from each other, insofar as each develop from a fundamentally human urge to overcome the alienation from the cosmos that our peculiarly human consciousness entails. Even at the risk of our lives, it seems, we will do whatever facilitates an experience of self as a participant in existence. Call that doing âreligionâ or âtheatre,â as you will. At its root, that sort of doing is âplay,â and it creates the universe. Really.
Incidentally, the accompanying photos are from my 2013 production Bouffant: La Teuer de Vampires (thereâs no âBuffyâ here). Yes, Iâm aware that teuer is not a French word.
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
(Routledge, 2019)
(New York: Routledge, 2014)
(New York: Palgrave, 2009)
âVideo Games, Theatre, and the Paradox of Fictionâ, Journal of Popular Culture 47.6 (2014): 1123-35.
âRasa and the âSaturated Eventââ, Studies in South Asian Film and Media 54.1 (2013): 47-55.
âThe Phenomenology of Audience in Vrindavanâs Râs LĂŽlâ&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;°Őłóąđ˛šłŮ°ůąđâ,&˛Ô˛ú˛őąč;Journal of Vaishnava Studies 21.1 (2013): 131-43.
âReligious Experience as a Model for Emotional Experience in Theatreâ, Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism 22.2 (2008)
âRasa, âRasaestheticsâ, and Dramatic Theory as Performance Packagingâ, Theatre Research International 31.1 (2006)
âWho Is the Indian Shakespeare? Appropriation of Authority in a Sanskrit A Midsummer Nightâs Dreamâ, New Literary History 34.2 (2003)
âStanislavsky, Smarana, and Bhâv: Acting Method as Religious Practice in Vrindavan, Indiaâ, Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism 18.1 (2003)
SELECTED RESEARCH AFFILIATIONS
2014 HOWARD FELLOW, The George A. and Eliza Gardner Howard Foundation
2001 FULBRIGHT-HAYS FELLOW, United States Department of Education
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
ASSOCIATION FOR ASIAN PERFORMANCE
INTERNATIONAL FEDERATION FOR THEATRE RESEARCH
AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY PROFESSORS
OTHER STUFF
I'm editor of.
Iâ˛m currently the Director of Asian Studies at 51ÁÔĆć College.
I also write the blog for Patheos.com
Education
M.A., South Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison