Exhibitionistic Theatricality |
Scenes generate a chance to see and be seen, shaping the bearing and manners of their members. Participants can enjoy the essentially social pleasure of beautifully performing a role or a part, or of watching others do so. Theatricality is the pleasure of appearances, the way we display ourselves to others and see their images in turn.
Does participating in the activity associated with [amenity] promote in participants a sense that it is good, because it is pleasurable, to notice and/or be noticed by others in a situation which is fundamentally anonymous or as a body on display, rather than for one`s personality or other individual, non-physical attributes? |
Is being noticed by others in terms of anonymity a crucial part of this amenity? Would the absence of this quality fundamentally change this amenity? |
Decision: Score = 5 |
Decision: Score = 4 |
Decision: Score = 99 |
Decision: Score = 3 |
Decision: Score = 2 |
Decision: Score = 1 |
Does participating in the activity associated with [amenity] promote in participants a sense that it is good, because it is pleasurable, to notice and/or be noticed by others as fully absorbed in a given activity, oblivious to public view? |
Is being noticed by others as oblivious to public view a crucial part of this amenity? Would the absence of this opposition fundamentally change this amenity? |