課程概述 |
Representations of mental illness have been predominant on British and American stages. Yet the uses of mental illness differ widely. Traditional depictions are sensationalized, exaggerated, or exploitative; they contribute to stigmatization and obfuscation of the realities faced by those who suffer from mental illness. In large part, mental illness functions primarily as a metaphor, a literary trope embodying resistance, revelation or dissolution of society’s conventions and bonds. Nevertheless, transforming perceptions of mental illness emerge in new plays, plays that strive to offer detailed and truthful portrayals of mental disease with their associated etiologies, attendant symptoms, and varying behaviors. In other words, the new plays deal with mental illness as a subject in its own right. The writers of the plays give voice to a wide array of experiences of mental illness. This course will explore the dynamics of several new works representing dementia, autism, schizophrenia, dissociative identity disorder, and addictive disorder: Tanika Gupta’s Mind Walking (2013), Florian Zeller’s The Father (2017), Simon Stephens’s The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time (2016), Joe Penhall’s Blue/Orange (2000), Tracy Letts’ Bug (2006), Anthony Neilson’s The Wonderful World of Dissocia (2004), and Rachel Wagstaff and Abel Duncan’s The Girl on the Train (2018). |
課程目標 |
◆ To analyze the characterizations and dramaturgies presenting specific mental
illness
◆ To think upon some issues related to mental illness, such as identity, social
pressures, free will and determinism, community, and individual responsibility
◆ To develop a working knowledge of mental illness that effects vast numbers of
people in contemporary societies |