The irruption of real violence: The open dramaturgy of theatrical mock trials and Milo Rau’s The Moscow Trials

Lapid Mashall, K. (2023) The irruption of real violence: The open dramaturgy of theatrical mock trials and Milo Rau’s The Moscow Trials. Documenta, 41(2), pp. 29-51. (doi: 10.21825/documenta.90029)

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Abstract

This article introduces a pathway for considering the political in theatrical performances which simulate an open and undetermined judicial proceeding directed at an audience, here termed Theatrical Mock Trials. The article presents a definition of the mock trial as an educational practice, decodes its theatricality, and discusses its pedagogical benefits in developing political insight and critical thinking. Employing the logic of the mock trial, the article proposes conceptualizing Theatrical Mock Trials through their postdramatic open dramaturgy. This dramaturgy, it is argued, devises a space within such theatrical trials for the emergence of the real, and by that provokes critical spectatorship. The article then analyses Milo Rau’s The Moscow Trials (2013) as a Theatrical Mock Trial and demonstrates how its open dramaturgy resulted in the irruption of real violence. Such dramaturgy of Theatrical Mock Trials, it is argued, engaged the audience in a political and critical surveying of the authoritative judicial mechanism.

Item Type:Articles
Status:Published
Refereed:Yes
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID:Lapid Mashall, Kfir
Authors: Lapid Mashall, K.
College/School:College of Arts & Humanities > School of Humanities
Journal Name:Documenta
Publisher:Ghent University
ISSN:0771-8640
Copyright Holders:Copyright: © 2023 The Author(s)
First Published:First published in Documenta 41(2): 29-51
Publisher Policy:Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence

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