3.8 Article

The secret of action: a cognitive exploration of eyewitness accounts of Stanislavsky's Active Analysis

Journal

STANISLAVSKI STUDIES
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/20567790.2023.2255603

Keywords

Active Analysis; Embodied Cognition; Maria Knebel; Vasili Toporkov; action-based theory of language; situational self

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This article examines eyewitness accounts of Stanislavsky's late practice from the perspective of cognitive science. The findings from cognitive neuroscience provide theoretical explanations for the mental and emotional phenomena resulting from physical actions, as described by Vasili Toporkov and Maria Knebel. The article suggests that Active Analysis, a technique used by Stanislavsky, stimulates these responses in a way that can be better understood using cognitive science.
This article approaches eyewitness accounts of Stanislavsky's late practice through the lens of cognitive science. Findings from this field identify relevant and robust theoretical reasons for statements by Vasili Toporkov and Maria Knebel that describe mental and emotional phenomena arising from physical actions. Cognitive neuroscience provides us with theory that is both grounded in phenomenological experience and also moves beyond it to allow us to better understand how Stanislavsky's Active Analysis stimulates these responses.

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