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Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2016

Pages: 243-264

ISBN (Hardback): 9781137366030

Full citation:

Adam Alston, "The promise of experience", in: Reframing immersive theatre, Berlin, Springer, 2016

The promise of experience

immersive theatre in the experience economy

Adam Alston

pp. 243-264

in: James Frieze (ed), Reframing immersive theatre, Berlin, Springer, 2016

Abstract

In this essay, Alston addresses what he calls the "promise of Experience" in immersive theatre and elsewhere in the experience economy. He draws on a range of examples, including Punchdrunk's And Darkness Descended … (2011) and The Crash of the Elysium (2011–2012), Hilary Westlake's Dining with Alice (1999), and Lucien Bourjeily's 66 Minutes in Damascus (2012), comparing them with Walt Disney World Resort, horror house culture, and the economisation and marketisation of customer experiences in the experience economy. He argues that those working in the experience economy, including immersive theatre makers, tend to idealise the consumer/audience experience, producing a gap between lived experiences and their ideal forms. He suggests that the experience economy, in true capitalist mode, abstracts from experience its commodity, or ideal, form and that immersive theatre risks doing likewise. For Alston, the turn towards the experiential in immersive theatre and the experience economy may come at the cost of recognising relationships between people.

Publication details

Publisher: Springer

Place: Berlin

Year: 2016

Pages: 243-264

ISBN (Hardback): 9781137366030

Full citation:

Adam Alston, "The promise of experience", in: Reframing immersive theatre, Berlin, Springer, 2016