European Churches and Chinese Temples as Neuro-Theatrical Sites

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A01=Mark Pizzato
affect theory
animal-human drive
Author_Mark Pizzato
Category=DSA
Category=DSC
Category=DSM
Category=JBCC7
Chinese temples
cognitive neural circuits
cognitive poetics
cognitive science
comp lit
Daoism and Buddhisim and literature
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
European churches
ideal affect psychology
literature and religion
literature and space
neuro-performance
performance studies
philosophy of emotion
philosophy of mind
religious and political tradition

Product details

  • ISBN 9798765109106
  • Weight: 460g
  • Dimensions: 148 x 226mm
  • Publication Date: 27 Nov 2025
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Compares monumental designs and performance spaces of Christian, Buddhist, and related sanctuaries, exploring how brain networks, animal-human emotions, and cultural ideals are reflected historically and affected today as "inner theatre" elements.

Integrating research across the humanities and sciences, this book explores how traditional designs of outer theatrical spaces left cultural imprints for the inner staging of Self and Other consciousness, which each of us performs daily based on how we think others view us. But believers also perform in a cosmic theatre. Ancestral spirits and gods (or God) watch and interact with them in awe-inspiring spaces, grooming affects toward in-group identification and sacrifice, or out-group rivalry and scapegoating.

In a study of over 80 buildings – shown by 40 images in the book, plus thousands of photos and videos online – Pizzato demonstrates how they reflect meta-theatrical projections from prior generations. They also affect the embodied, embedded, enacted, and extended (4E) cognition of current visitors, who bring performance frameworks of belief, hope, and doubt to the sacred site. This involves neuro-social, inner/outer theatre networks with patriarchal, maternal, and trickster paradigms.

European Churches and Chinese Temples as Neuro-Theatrical Sites investigates performative material cultures, creating dialogs between theatre, philosophy, history, and various (cognitive, affective, social, biological) sciences. It applies them to the architecture of religious buildings: from Catholic, Orthodox, and Protestant in Europe, plus key sites in Jerusalem and prior “pagan” temples, to Buddhist, Daoist, Confucian, and imperial in China. It thus reveals individualist/collectivist, focal/holistic, analytical/dialectical, and melodramatic/tragicomic trajectories, with cathartic poetics for the future.

Mark Pizzato is Professor of Theatre and Film at University of North Carolina at Charlotte, USA. His publications include Mapping Global Theatre Histories (2019), Beast-People Onscreen and in Your Brain (2016), Inner Theatres of Good and Evil (2011), Death in American Texts and Performances (with Lisa Perdigao; 2010), Ghosts of Theatre and Cinema in the Brain (2006), Theatres of Human Sacrifice (2004), and Edges of Loss (1998).

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