"A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)

International audience The British stage has been delving into the minds of women suffering from psychological disorders in a number of plays over the past twenty years. If Sarah Kane’s 4.48 Psychosis (1999) and Anthony Neilson’s The Wonderful World of Dissocia (2004) are among the most well-known -...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ayache, Solange
Other Authors: Voix Anglophones : Littérature et Esthétique (VALE), Sorbonne Université (SU), Institut national supérieur du professorat et de l'éducation - Académie de Paris (INSPÉ Paris), Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (St Mary’s University), Dr. Michelle Paull (St Mary’s University)
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: HAL CCSD 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hal.science/hal-04288077
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spelling ftsorbonneuniv:oai:HAL:hal-04288077v1 2024-09-15T17:50:21+00:00 "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010) Ayache, Solange Voix Anglophones : Littérature et Esthétique (VALE) Sorbonne Université (SU) Institut national supérieur du professorat et de l'éducation - Académie de Paris (INSPÉ Paris) Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (St Mary’s University) Dr. Michelle Paull (St Mary’s University) St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London, United Kingdom 2018-06-15 https://hal.science/hal-04288077 en eng HAL CCSD hal-04288077 https://hal.science/hal-04288077 Interdisciplinary one-day conference "'The Mad Woman in the Arctic' : Representing Mental Health in Theatre, Literature and the Visual Arts" https://hal.science/hal-04288077 Interdisciplinary one-day conference "'The Mad Woman in the Arctic' : Representing Mental Health in Theatre, Literature and the Visual Arts", Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (St Mary’s University); Dr. Michelle Paull (St Mary’s University), Jun 2018, St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London, United Kingdom psychiatric realism In-yer-face theatre In-yer-head theatre mental health mad woman uncertainty contemporary British theatre Mark Haddon mind mental space mindscapes bipolar personality disorder theatre studies drama studies psychopoetics stage realism [SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences [SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject Conference papers 2018 ftsorbonneuniv 2024-07-25T23:47:39Z International audience The British stage has been delving into the minds of women suffering from psychological disorders in a number of plays over the past twenty years. If Sarah Kane’s 4.48 Psychosis (1999) and Anthony Neilson’s The Wonderful World of Dissocia (2004) are among the most well-known - marking a shift, as we could argue, from a theatre ‘in-yer-face’ to a theatre ‘in-yer-head’ - Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears also deserves attention as an instance of what can be called a ‘Theatre of Uncertainty’, along with other plays - such as Simon Stephens’s Heisenberg, for example. In Haddon’s play, Kay, an artist, is bipolar; as she explains that ‘We think there’s only one world. […] But there are so many worlds, aren’t there, one laid over the other’, the chaotic structure of the play becomes a metaphor for her subjective, pathological perceptions and delusions, highlighting our sense of reality as a construct through poetic devices which break with the traditional dramatic linearity of the conventional play. Indeed, instead of providing a chronological, rather deterministic succession of scenes, the drama emerges from a broken alternation of possible scenarios. Exploring ‘the difficulty of coping, on a domestic level, with mental illness’, the contradictory, mixed up scenes that make up Polar Bears invite the reader-spectator to imagine the parallel worlds of an undecidable story, instead of merely registering a given narrative. In providing a structural image of the female character's pathological states as she alternately goes through manic and depressive phases, the play also reflects on the tentative process of its own writing, while encouraging us to put in question our perception of reality as a defined, single object, questioning our freedom of choice and self-determination. Haddon’s piece thus opens a dramatic space which allows for a form of ‘psychopathological realism’ to develop, to use Christina Wald’s expression, and results in a dramaturgy of possibility based on the representation of the ... Conference Object Arctic HAL Sorbonne Université
institution Open Polar
collection HAL Sorbonne Université
op_collection_id ftsorbonneuniv
language English
topic psychiatric realism
In-yer-face theatre
In-yer-head theatre
mental health
mad woman
uncertainty
contemporary British theatre
Mark Haddon
mind
mental space
mindscapes
bipolar personality disorder
theatre studies
drama studies
psychopoetics
stage realism
[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences
[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature
spellingShingle psychiatric realism
In-yer-face theatre
In-yer-head theatre
mental health
mad woman
uncertainty
contemporary British theatre
Mark Haddon
mind
mental space
mindscapes
bipolar personality disorder
theatre studies
drama studies
psychopoetics
stage realism
[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences
[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature
Ayache, Solange
"A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
topic_facet psychiatric realism
In-yer-face theatre
In-yer-head theatre
mental health
mad woman
uncertainty
contemporary British theatre
Mark Haddon
mind
mental space
mindscapes
bipolar personality disorder
theatre studies
drama studies
psychopoetics
stage realism
[SHS]Humanities and Social Sciences
[SHS.LITT]Humanities and Social Sciences/Literature
description International audience The British stage has been delving into the minds of women suffering from psychological disorders in a number of plays over the past twenty years. If Sarah Kane’s 4.48 Psychosis (1999) and Anthony Neilson’s The Wonderful World of Dissocia (2004) are among the most well-known - marking a shift, as we could argue, from a theatre ‘in-yer-face’ to a theatre ‘in-yer-head’ - Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears also deserves attention as an instance of what can be called a ‘Theatre of Uncertainty’, along with other plays - such as Simon Stephens’s Heisenberg, for example. In Haddon’s play, Kay, an artist, is bipolar; as she explains that ‘We think there’s only one world. […] But there are so many worlds, aren’t there, one laid over the other’, the chaotic structure of the play becomes a metaphor for her subjective, pathological perceptions and delusions, highlighting our sense of reality as a construct through poetic devices which break with the traditional dramatic linearity of the conventional play. Indeed, instead of providing a chronological, rather deterministic succession of scenes, the drama emerges from a broken alternation of possible scenarios. Exploring ‘the difficulty of coping, on a domestic level, with mental illness’, the contradictory, mixed up scenes that make up Polar Bears invite the reader-spectator to imagine the parallel worlds of an undecidable story, instead of merely registering a given narrative. In providing a structural image of the female character's pathological states as she alternately goes through manic and depressive phases, the play also reflects on the tentative process of its own writing, while encouraging us to put in question our perception of reality as a defined, single object, questioning our freedom of choice and self-determination. Haddon’s piece thus opens a dramatic space which allows for a form of ‘psychopathological realism’ to develop, to use Christina Wald’s expression, and results in a dramaturgy of possibility based on the representation of the ...
author2 Voix Anglophones : Littérature et Esthétique (VALE)
Sorbonne Université (SU)
Institut national supérieur du professorat et de l'éducation - Académie de Paris (INSPÉ Paris)
Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (St Mary’s University)
Dr. Michelle Paull (St Mary’s University)
format Conference Object
author Ayache, Solange
author_facet Ayache, Solange
author_sort Ayache, Solange
title "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
title_short "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
title_full "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
title_fullStr "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
title_full_unstemmed "A bear in the distance, perhaps" : Uncertainty and the Dramatisation of Mental Illness in Mark Haddon’s Polar Bears (2010)
title_sort "a bear in the distance, perhaps" : uncertainty and the dramatisation of mental illness in mark haddon’s polar bears (2010)
publisher HAL CCSD
publishDate 2018
url https://hal.science/hal-04288077
op_coverage St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London, United Kingdom
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Interdisciplinary one-day conference "'The Mad Woman in the Arctic' : Representing Mental Health in Theatre, Literature and the Visual Arts"
https://hal.science/hal-04288077
Interdisciplinary one-day conference "'The Mad Woman in the Arctic' : Representing Mental Health in Theatre, Literature and the Visual Arts", Kasia Zaremba-Byrne (St Mary’s University); Dr. Michelle Paull (St Mary’s University), Jun 2018, St Mary’s University, Twickenham, London, United Kingdom
op_relation hal-04288077
https://hal.science/hal-04288077
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