Final published version, 2.45 MB, PDF document
Available under license: CC BY-NC-ND: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
Research output: Thesis › Doctoral Thesis
}
TY - BOOK
T1 - Performing Miracles
T2 - The real magic behind the performance
AU - Issitt, James
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Whilst the study of magic, for many years, has examined the mechanics of legerdemain there remains the need for a reflective analytical and pedagogical framework that can be utilised for the exposition and development of the close-up magician’s practice. As a premise, if there are two magicians, Magician A has the best sleight of hand in the world but lacking in performance skills; and Magician B can competently execute ten tricks but has excellent performance – to the layperson, who is the better magician? This text synthesises the theories of magic and performance, in order to create a new analytical tool for the improvement of the skills of the close-up magician. It takes Kowzan’s (1968) 13 Point System as its basis to formulate a new analytical tool. The Issitt 12-point System can be used to analyse a performance of close-up magic and assist in the teaching of performance skills. It offers that the close-up magician’s set comprises three discrete areas: Technical Ability, Performance and Audience Relationship. It suggests that a close-up magician’s practice can be enhanced when all the elements within the new System are considered. The Issitt 12-point System has been tested on the writer’s own practice, that of an apprentice magician, and an expert in the field of close-up magic, Fay Presto. Practitioners in other forms of magic, other performance fields and beyond may consider the new System as a model which can be adapted within their own disciplines.
AB - Whilst the study of magic, for many years, has examined the mechanics of legerdemain there remains the need for a reflective analytical and pedagogical framework that can be utilised for the exposition and development of the close-up magician’s practice. As a premise, if there are two magicians, Magician A has the best sleight of hand in the world but lacking in performance skills; and Magician B can competently execute ten tricks but has excellent performance – to the layperson, who is the better magician? This text synthesises the theories of magic and performance, in order to create a new analytical tool for the improvement of the skills of the close-up magician. It takes Kowzan’s (1968) 13 Point System as its basis to formulate a new analytical tool. The Issitt 12-point System can be used to analyse a performance of close-up magic and assist in the teaching of performance skills. It offers that the close-up magician’s set comprises three discrete areas: Technical Ability, Performance and Audience Relationship. It suggests that a close-up magician’s practice can be enhanced when all the elements within the new System are considered. The Issitt 12-point System has been tested on the writer’s own practice, that of an apprentice magician, and an expert in the field of close-up magic, Fay Presto. Practitioners in other forms of magic, other performance fields and beyond may consider the new System as a model which can be adapted within their own disciplines.
U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1083
DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1083
M3 - Doctoral Thesis
PB - Lancaster University
ER -