More than objects: Robot performance in Japan's Bacarobo Theatre
This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that ma...
Saved in:
Published in | Studies in theatre and performance Vol. 30; no. 3; pp. 341 - 353 |
---|---|
Main Author | |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Bristol, Eng
Routledge
01.11.2010
Intellect Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 1468-2761 2040-0616 |
DOI | 10.1386/stap.30.3.341_1 |
Cover
Abstract | This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that makes them much more than just objects in themselves. The robot competition unites strategies typical of the Japanese variety show context with effects creating a temporary, consensual reality to present robots as integral players in humorous situations. In this inclusive mise-en-scène, Bacarobo combines the concept of robot as a magical object with the transformative power of the clown to draw upon the Japanese idea of the robot's role in forging a technologically advanced future. The result is that the uncertain and indeterminate aspects of the robotic machines-machines otherwise without practical use and, therefore, important social referents-are turned into something acceptable and even endearing in the name of comedy. The Japanese robot comedy show provides useful material to consider recent thinking within theatre and performance studies on the subject-object relation and on the activation of theatrical space, audience and objects. |
---|---|
AbstractList | This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that makes them much more than just objects in themselves. The robot competition unites strategies typical of the Japanese variety show context with effects creating a temporary, consensual reality to present robots as integral players in humorous situations. In this inclusive mise-en-scène, Bacarobo combines the concept of robot as a magical object with the transformative power of the clown to draw upon the Japanese idea of the robot's role in forging a technologically advanced future. The result is that the uncertain and indeterminate aspects of the robotic machines - machines otherwise without practical use and, therefore, important social referents - are turned into something acceptable and even endearing in the name of comedy. The Japanese robot comedy show provides useful material to consider recent thinking within theatre and performance studies on the subject - object relation and on the activation of theatrical space, audience and objects. (Author abstract) This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that makes them much more than just objects in themselves. The robot competition unites strategies typical of the Japanese variety show context with effects creating a temporary, consensual reality to present robots as integral players in humorous situations. In this inclusive mise-en-scène , Bacarobo combines the concept of robot as a magical object with the transformative power of the clown to draw upon the Japanese idea of the robot's role in forging a technologically advanced future. The result is that the uncertain and indeterminate aspects of the robotic machines - machines otherwise without practical use and, therefore, important social referents - are turned into something acceptable and even endearing in the name of comedy. The Japanese robot comedy show provides useful material to consider recent thinking within theatre and performance studies on the subject-object relation and on the activation of theatrical space, audience and objects. This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that makes them much more than just objects in themselves. The robot competition unites strategies typical of the Japanese variety show context with effects creating a temporary, consensual reality to present robots as integral players in humorous situations. In this inclusive mise-en-scne, Bacarobo combines the concept of robot as a magical object with the transformative power of the clown to draw upon the Japanese idea of the robot's role in forging a technologically advanced future. The result is that the uncertain and indeterminate aspects of the robotic machines machines otherwise without practical use and, therefore, important social referents are turned into something acceptable and even endearing in the name of comedy. The Japanese robot comedy show provides useful material to consider recent thinking within theatre and performance studies on the subjectobject relation and on the activation of theatrical space, audience and objects. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT] This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of Bacarobo, robots can be comedians because the theatrical space and dynamics of Bacarobo attribute a performance capacity to its robots that makes them much more than just objects in themselves. The robot competition unites strategies typical of the Japanese variety show context with effects creating a temporary, consensual reality to present robots as integral players in humorous situations. In this inclusive mise-en-scène, Bacarobo combines the concept of robot as a magical object with the transformative power of the clown to draw upon the Japanese idea of the robot's role in forging a technologically advanced future. The result is that the uncertain and indeterminate aspects of the robotic machines-machines otherwise without practical use and, therefore, important social referents-are turned into something acceptable and even endearing in the name of comedy. The Japanese robot comedy show provides useful material to consider recent thinking within theatre and performance studies on the subject-object relation and on the activation of theatrical space, audience and objects. |
Author | Sone, Yuji |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Yuji surname: Sone fullname: Sone, Yuji email: yuji.sone@scmp.mq.edu.au |
BookMark | eNqNkcFOGzEQQK0KpAbometKPcBlw9jjrh1OBdTSIhBSFc6W15lVNtrYi-2o4u_rJO0FiYqTL--NPc9H7MAHT4ydcphy1M1FynacIkxxipIb_oFNBEiooeHNAZtw2ehaqIZ_ZEcprQAESqkm7OtDiFTlpfVVaFfkcrqsfoU25Gqk2IW4tt5R1fvqzo7Wn6Xq2jobC1DNl2RzpBN22Nkh0ae_5zF7-v5tfvOjvn-8_XlzdV871JDrReugbVsSqARHKbC8S7VCKOGAFGnXzJRDAofSkkJZNnKSWz1btAqIOjxmZ_u5YwzPG0rZrPvkaBisp7BJRis9E1_UDAp5_l-SAzaAQu_Qz6_QVdhEX_YolOQIoPmWuthTLoaUInVmjP3axpcCmW17s21vEAyaXftiwN7ofS4Xl6zvUC7_Kbvsv0McFibblyHELpZf6JPBt-Q_OSabsA |
ContentType | Journal Article |
Copyright | 2010 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC 2010 Intellect Ltd 2010 |
Copyright_xml | – notice: 2010 Taylor and Francis Group, LLC 2010 – notice: Intellect Ltd 2010 |
DBID | AAYXX CITATION C18 |
DOI | 10.1386/stap.30.3.341_1 |
DatabaseName | CrossRef Humanities Index |
DatabaseTitle | CrossRef British Humanities Index (BHI) |
DatabaseTitleList | British Humanities Index (BHI) British Humanities Index (BHI) |
DeliveryMethod | fulltext_linktorsrc |
Discipline | Drama |
EISSN | 2040-0616 |
EndPage | 353 |
ExternalDocumentID | 10_1386_stap_30_3_341_1 stap.30.3.341 10776300 |
Genre | Article Articles |
GroupedDBID | -~X 0BK 0R~ 123 AACJB AAMFJ AAMIU AAPUL AAZMC ABCCY ABFIM ABJNI ABLIJ ABPEM ABTAI ABXUL ABXYU ACGFS ACTIO ACTOA ADAHI ADCVX ADKVQ AECIN AEISY AEMXT AEYOC AEZRU AGDLA AGQWK AGRBW AHDZW AIJEM AKBVH ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS ALQZU AVBZW AWYRJ BEJHT BLEHA BMOTO BOHLJ CAG CCCUG CS3 DGFLZ DKSSO EBS EIB E~B E~C FE4 G-F GTTXZ H13 HZ~ IAT IPNFZ KYCEM M4Z O9- OVD P2P RIG RNANH ROSJB RSYQP STATR TBQAZ TDBHL TEA TEORI TFH TFW TNTFI TRJHH TUROJ ADYSH AFRVT AIYEW AAGDL AAHIA AAYXX AEFOU AMPGV CITATION TASJS AKRON C18 |
ID | FETCH-LOGICAL-c380t-dbc0bbbe2372134230617b2272c0e7e8c697c3e0c34ae734386c41a89db70eef3 |
ISSN | 1468-2761 |
IngestDate | Thu Sep 04 16:04:41 EDT 2025 Fri Sep 05 07:03:08 EDT 2025 Mon Jul 14 09:37:25 EDT 2025 Tue Jul 01 01:01:13 EDT 2025 Wed Mar 26 00:36:56 EDT 2025 Wed Dec 25 09:05:18 EST 2024 |
IsPeerReviewed | true |
IsScholarly | true |
Issue | 3 |
Language | English |
LinkModel | OpenURL |
MergedId | FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c380t-dbc0bbbe2372134230617b2272c0e7e8c697c3e0c34ae734386c41a89db70eef3 |
Notes | ObjectType-Article-2 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-1 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
PQID | 1041300810 |
PQPubID | 24074 |
PageCount | 13 |
ParticipantIDs | proquest_miscellaneous_878925790 proquest_journals_1041300810 proquest_miscellaneous_1036032890 crossref_primary_10_1386_stap_30_3_341_1 intellect_primary_10_1386_stap_30_3_341_1 informaworld_taylorfrancis_310_1386_stap_30_3_341_1 |
ProviderPackageCode | CITATION AAYXX |
PublicationCentury | 2000 |
PublicationDate | 2010-11-01 |
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD | 2010-11-01 |
PublicationDate_xml | – month: 11 year: 2010 text: 2010-11-01 day: 01 |
PublicationDecade | 2010 |
PublicationPlace | Bristol, Eng |
PublicationPlace_xml | – name: Bristol, Eng |
PublicationTitle | Studies in theatre and performance |
PublicationYear | 2010 |
Publisher | Routledge Intellect Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group |
Publisher_xml | – name: Routledge – name: Intellect – name: Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group |
SSID | ssj0023447 |
Score | 1.7745789 |
Snippet | This article examines Bacarobo, a Japanese comedy contest for robots that are designed to perform and entertain the audience with laughter. In the theatre of... |
SourceID | proquest crossref intellect informaworld |
SourceType | Aggregation Database Index Database Publisher |
StartPage | 341 |
SubjectTerms | Comedy competition Contests Ideology Japanese object Performance spaces Performance studies Robot Robots Theater studies theatre Variety shows |
Title | More than objects: Robot performance in Japan's Bacarobo Theatre |
URI | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1386/stap.30.3.341_1 https://doi.org/10.1386/stap.30.3.341_1 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1041300810 https://www.proquest.com/docview/1036032890 https://www.proquest.com/docview/878925790 |
Volume | 30 |
hasFullText | 1 |
inHoldings | 1 |
isFullTextHit | |
isPrint | |
link | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV3db5UwFG9090H3YPyMd05TExM1N2ChXAo-OZ3mZsl82uL0paGlJJgIyx33xb_ec9rCBeei7oWQUgr0R3s-es6vhLxYqpSnmSkDVZQiSNSygiFlqqASmoEyx0xkqZSOP6er0-TobHm23VHPZpd0KtQ__5hXch1UoQxwxSzZ_0B2aBQK4BzwhSMgDMd_wvi4XZsF-r4XrUJ_igtva1Vr6YiHhIC6WRyBTHSbp7wvcKce1WKsRdGtJ5FAPqjQxz7iVccjsG1rcMi0zhP6dfO9HjsOMAhj4jiYRhy52Q_TsGLh2NFDY8tiDDkEoZ-Op0y_lFKPLWo7__EkGolS7niAL83S3C4agfZ7HnIW8hDuktFWIA1hghFyDXHGbpJZLASuws8OVoffvgwWNdIV9ulj-N6euwnaf_Nb6xO1Y0JKu0tu1X3GziWBbLWMk7vkjjcP6IHD-h65YZr7ZHa4Ln4UD8g7xJsi3tTj_ZZatOkIIVo31KL98oL2WFOP9UNy-unjyYdV4HfACDTPWBeUSjOllIm5QOY9NBcjoeJYxJoZYTKd5kJzwzRPCiN4Ah-uk6jI8lIJZkzFH5GdBn6Ix4SCWapybZLKVFVSsrSoYChGoICXSoGSn8zJq76D5LkjOpF2tTNLJfal5ExyaftyTvi4A2VnfUuV2whG8ivvej3089-fsN_jIP14u4C6qHCBCsvm5PlwGWZDXOIqGtNusA5PkSEyhzr0ijqZyHIQVDnbu9Z3PCG3t6Npn-x06415Coppp5753_MXdDGN8Q |
linkProvider | Library Specific Holdings |
linkToHtml | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1Lb9QwEB5Vu4fCAcpLLLRgJCTgkK03zsYJ6qG8qrB0e6i2Ui_IyjhjqUIk1W72wq9nnMdCgQqp50wS2-N52vMNwMspxipOqAgwL3QQ4dSxSJELnLaSnTlJkwZKaX4SZ2fR7Hx6vgUHfS2Mv1bpY2jXAkU0utoLt09Gt20aknif_SYO1jneHLMONhz7DKcpG8IBDBensyzbBFweza6vLgo5Xu-gff7xiStW6Qpm6W3YvugLOv7S140ROroLX_vht3dPvo3XNY7tjz-QHW86vx2403mn4l27ne7BFpX3YfhxmX_PH8DhvFqS8Kl2UaFP36zeitMKq1pc_qo-EBelmLEBLl-txPvcNwXCSiy8xl_SQzg7-rT4kAVdA4bAqkTWQYFWIiKFSnvgNx-tTDSGoQ6tJE2JjVNtFUmropy0injsNprkSVqglkROPYJBWZX0GARHRZhaihw5FxUyzh3vhAn7fwUi-5jRCF73DDCXLc6GaQ7bktj45TBKGmWa5RiB-p1Bpm5SG67tQ2LUtW-92fDx_3_Y7flsOpFeMa239-xByRG82DxmYfQnLHlJ1drTqNgDFKZMI66hSXSSsp5M5ZMbzeM5bGeL-bE5_nzy5Sncai4zNKWRuzCol2vaYx-pxmedKPwEbpINXw |
linkToPdf | http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwnV1ba9swFD6UBLb1obuWpu02DQbdHpwqliPZ28suXciytYySQh8KwpKPoJTaIXFe-ut75Eu2riuDPvvY1u1cPknnOwBvh0YKGWMWmDRTQWSGjlQKXeCU5RTMcRxUVEqHR3J8Ek1Oh6dr8LHNhfHXKj2GdjVRRGWrvXLPMldXaYjlPoVNhNUJbvbJBGuCPl3p80U70J0eT8bjFd7yZHZtclFIcL1h9vnHJ244pRuUpevw8LzN57hlrisfNHoMZ23r66snF_1lafr26i9ix3t27wlsNLEp-1wvpqewhvkz6B7M08v0OXw6LObI_EY7K4zfvFl8YMeFKUo2-517wM5zNiH3m-8t2JfUlwQyBZt6ez_HF3Ay-jb9Og6a8guBFTEvg8xYbozBUChP--axykCZMFSh5agwtjJRViC3IkpRiYjabqNBGieZURzRiU3o5EWOW8AIE5nEYuTQuSjjMnW0DgYU_WXGUIQZ9eBdO_56VrNs6OqoLZbaD4cWXAtdDUcPxJ_zo8tqY8PVVUi0uPOt96tp_P8fdttp1o1CL0jWe3uKn3gP3qwekyr685U0x2LpZYT09IQJybA7ZGIVJ2QlE759r368hge_Dkb65_ejHzvwqLrJUOVF7kKnnC_xJQVIpXnVKMI1IoEMAw |
openUrl | ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=More+than+objects%3A+Robot+performance+in+Japan%27s+Bacarobo+Theatre&rft.jtitle=Studies+in+theatre+and+performance&rft.au=Sone%2C+Yuji&rft.date=2010-11-01&rft.pub=Routledge&rft.issn=1468-2761&rft.eissn=2040-0616&rft.volume=30&rft.issue=3&rft.spage=341&rft.epage=353&rft_id=info:doi/10.1386%2Fstap.30.3.341_1&rft.externalDocID=10776300 |
thumbnail_l | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=1468-2761&client=summon |
thumbnail_m | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=1468-2761&client=summon |
thumbnail_s | http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=1468-2761&client=summon |