Talking about “Word Made Flesh”

Last week Matthew Freeman of the New Books in Theatre podcast and his own blog sat down with me to discuss Word Made Flesh: Philosophy, Eros and Contemporary Tragic Drama; you can now listen to the one-hour interview here. Matt offers a very short synopsis of the interview:

George Hunka’s book Word Made Flesh: Philosophy, Eros, and Contemporary Tragic Drama (Eyecorner Press, 2011) offers a series of challenges, provocations and meditations on Theatre (with a capital “T”). It’s a valuable piece of work to wrestle with, inviting both consideration and criticism. Much of Word Made Flesh is distilled from his public musings on his website Superfluities – now Superfluities Redux. Hunka became known as an early adopter of blogging, but quickly distinguished himself from most theatre bloggers by keeping his head squarely in the world of theory, and spending as little time as possible on the “business” of theatre. His perspective is sadly rare: more interested in how plays are made and what they have to say, than how to market and fund them. Our conversation touches on the health to be found in depression, Beckett as a comedian, the idea of utility as a paradigm for art, and the audience as a collective versus the audience as an individual.

Also I must thank Chris Wilkinson at the Guardian theatre blog for his kind words regarding the book and a few recent posts last week.

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