TY - JOUR AU - Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria AU - Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim PY - 2018/03/05 Y2 - 2024/03/29 TI - Theatre, Science, and the Popular: Two Contemporary Examples From Scandinavia JF - Nordic Theatre Studies JA - NTS VL - 29 IS - 2 SE - Articles thematic section DO - 10.7146/nts.v29i2.104609 UR - https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/104609 SP - 137-161 AB - <p class="NTSAbstract">This article explores relations between theatre, science, and the popular, which have largely been overlooked by Nordic theatre studies. The aim here is to introduce and understand the variety of ways theatre may communicate science to the public, the point of departure informed by the historical development of the relations between the three concepts and Edmund Husserl’s phenomenological critique of modern science. The two analytical examples are Swedish Charlotte Engelkes’ and Peder Bjurman’s<em> Svarta hål – en kvantfysisk vaudeville</em> (2014) and Danish Hotel Pro Forma’s adult per­formance for children <em>Kosmos+ En Big Bang forestilling om universets vidundre </em>(2014).</p>History of science reveals complex combinations of science and the popular in theatri­cal events that raises the question if the audience’s understanding of the scientific sub­ject matter itself always was – or has to be – the purpose of the popular science perfor­mance, or if it rather was – and is – about spurring interest by inspiring sentiments of wonder and reflection on science’s impact on life and outlooks. Newer conceptual devel­opments also suggest that it is not always the case that theatre is a tool for sci­ence popularisation, as a specific genre <em>science theatre</em>, but that scientific information and concepts are artistically interpreted by theatre, and not always in ways affirmative of the science. This later variant is called <em>science-in-theatre</em>. The two genres are demon­strated through the analyses of <em>Svarta hål</em> and <em>Kosmos+</em>, the claim being that the first was an ambiguous exposition of science, i.e. science-in-theatre, whereas the second established an artistically visionary affirmation, as regular science theatre. ER -