2025
Theatrical Mentalisation: Experiencing Performance with Others
DRÁBEK, PavelBasic information
Original name
Theatrical Mentalisation: Experiencing Performance with Others
Authors
DRÁBEK, Pavel
Edition
Divadelní konference JAMU 2025: Art of Experience, Galerie TIC, Brno, 2025
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Presentations at conferences
Field of Study
60403 Performing arts studies
Country of publisher
Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
References:
Marked to be transferred to RIV
No
Organization unit
Theatre Faculty
Keywords (in Czech)
Divadlo; estetická funkce; Jan Mukařovský; Robin Dunbar
Keywords in English
Theatre; aesthetic function; Jan Mukařovský; Robin Dunbar
Tags
Tags
International impact
Changed: 1/4/2026 00:22, Mgr. Jana Kořínková, Ph.D.
Abstract
In the original language
In his 2022 book How Religion Evolved: And Why It Endures, the evolutionary psychologist Robin Dunbar published the findings of his team’s research on humans’ ability to work with several sets of intentions („I think that A believes that C is wrong about D’s offense towards E“). In so doing, Dunbar develops the concept of mentalisation as previously formulated by social linguists and philosophers. The ability to think with others at a certain level of complexity is, for Dunbar, the necessary mental capacity for the evolution of religion. In a previous essay, Pavel Drábek speculatively applied this concept to the experiencing of performance and analysed selected works from Prague Quadrennial 2023. In his paper, he would like to develop the theory of theatrical mentalisation even further and align it with Otakar Zich’s proto-phenomenology of the theatre and Jan Mukařovský’s aethestic function, norm and value as social facts. The resulting combination, I argue, is a very practical analytical tool that may allow us to understand what is going on while we are watching as part of an audience – experiencing performance with others: we watch while we are aware that there are others watching as well. The phenomenological reality of performance results from this interplay of minds that watch other minds watch others on stage make decisions and take action.