Anonymous Subjects: Performing Anonymity Across Media 1890–1948

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Publicado en:ProQuest Dissertations and Theses (2025)
Autor principal: Guo Silver, Adrian
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ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
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100 1 |a Guo Silver, Adrian 
245 1 |a Anonymous Subjects: Performing Anonymity Across Media 1890–1948 
260 |b ProQuest Dissertations & Theses  |c 2025 
513 |a Dissertation/Thesis 
520 3 |a This dissertation introduces “anonymity” as a critical concept that reshapes how we understand modernist performance, subject formation, and political agency. Challenging the enduring association between naming and power, this dissertation shows how anonymity operates as a performative structure across dance, theatre, and cinema to unfix identity and enable alternative forms of individual and collective action. Each chapter analyzes a central aesthetic object through archival research, inductive formal analysis, and critical theory. Chapter 1 reads Les Noces (1923) by Bronislava Nijinska and Igor Stravinsky as a critique of J.L. Austin's theory of the performative, staging non-sovereign collective agency through the ballet's anonymous peasant chorus. Chapter 2 examines interpellation in Maurice Maeterlinck’s The Blind (1890) and Robert Wiene’s The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari (1920), arguing that anonymity structures the formation of subject positions. Chapter 3 turns from the anonymity of the interpellated individual to that of the collective, focusing on the figure of the proletariat in Bicycle Thieves (1948), and showing how the film mobilizes choral anonymity to untether class from fixed identity and open the possibility of an anonymous revolutionary subject. Across these case studies, the dissertation reframes anonymity as a performative mode of appearance that unsettles dominant theories of action, collectivity, and representation. In this account, anonymity displaces the centrality of named identity in theories of agency and appearance, revealing how political subjectivation emerges through structurally anonymous, non-sovereign acts. By reading modernist performance as a site in which anonymity materializes subjectivity and agency, the dissertation reframes anonymity as a critical resource for aesthetic form and political theory alike. 
653 |a Performing arts 
653 |a Comparative literature 
653 |a Film studies 
653 |a Theater 
653 |a Dance 
773 0 |t ProQuest Dissertations and Theses  |g (2025) 
786 0 |d ProQuest  |t ProQuest Dissertations & Theses Global 
856 4 1 |3 Citation/Abstract  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3228171122/abstract/embedded/75I98GEZK8WCJMPQ?source=fedsrch 
856 4 0 |3 Full Text - PDF  |u https://www.proquest.com/docview/3228171122/fulltextPDF/embedded/75I98GEZK8WCJMPQ?source=fedsrch