Mainstage

Aron Taylor, Adrienne Mischler, Robert Pierson, and Elizabeth Doss in Rude Mechs' recreation of Mabou Mines' B Beaver Animation. Photo by Bret Brookshire. Used with Permission

The Performing Arts Department at Washington University in St. Louis recently hosted a symposium on the topic of performance re-creation. My colleague Christine Knoblauch O’Neal, a dance scholar and artist, quickly settled on reperformance in part because of her ongoing research into the work of dance trusts—institutions like the Antony Tudor Ballet Trust that are dedicated to preserving choreography. But we saw too that the activities of these institutions are closely linked to broader questions.

Other arts institutions are now facing the complex tasks of curating performance. Marina Abramovic’s plans to open an institute of performance art in an abandoned theatre in Hudson, New York, point to a wider institutional investment in “live art” (and incipient mutations in theatre space). Theater companies including the Wooster Group and the Rude Mechanicals have garnered attention for re-creating plays such as Grotowski’s Acropolis (1964) and the Performance Group’s Dionysus in ’69.

I am pleased to share here some ideas that emerged at this event:

1) Curators, dance repetiteurs, and re-creators of theatre face cognate theoretical and practical challenges. But we approach the concepts from widely different angles. Amelia Jones reminds us that for the critical tradition around performance art, the live body is very nearly a scandal in itself, in part because it resists the sort of aesthetic containment that enfolds painting and sculpture. From the point of view of dance and theatre the body is potent element, but hardly a disruptive fact in itself. Thus dance trusts cultivate just the sort of containment and commodification that performance-based visual art deploys the live body to resist.

2) What seems at first to be an impasse for interdisciplinary research into reperformance in fact points to a caveat that it must acknowledge in order to proceed. Branislav Jakovljevic pointed out in St. Louis that reperformance functions according to principles imposed by the specific economy that produces it. Dance reperformance is subject to the criterion of authenticity and is inseparable from the cult of genius—both of which notions the avant-garde holds under suspicion. Revivals of plays and attention to “original” theater practices are likewise inflected by institutional commitments to literary interpretation, and, like battle re-enactments, exude the same melancholic affect retailed by “living history.”

3) What remains an open question, to my mind, is whether the fact that these distinct economies have now converged to exploit a common set of reperformance techniques is related in a meaningful way to this historical moment. What characteristics of temporal experience or media-driven consciousness might have led us here? A historiography of performance across disciplines is required even to frame the question.

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I go the first day, the first week, sometimes even the first month of each class in a state of raw terror. This would be logical, even normal, if my fear was a reaction to the responsibility, the public speaking, or the content. My fear, however, comes from the names. While I have tried a number of strategies for name retention, I haven’t had much success—until this year when I came up with an idea for digital flash cards. It’s worked so well that the editors of theater-historiography.org invited me to share this walk-through of my process on the site.

Step 1: Signature List. Hand out a sign-in sheet (Pro tip: don’t distribute the list until all of the students are there and seated. If students come in after the fact the list and the photo won’t match up).

Step 2: Photos. Take a picture of the class. Make sure the students aren’t hiding behind people in front of them. If you prefer, you could also take individual photos.

Step 3: Edit and Label. If you are using a group photo, open it in a program that allows image cropping (Paint works fine). Use the select tool to draw a box around a student’s head. Once you have it how you want it, hit crop. Then, use your signature list to find the student’s name. Save the newly cropped photo (as a .jpeg) using the student’s name as the file name. Repeat with each student. If you are using individual pictures, just edit the file name of each on using your signature list for reference.

Step 4: Make Flashcards. Next, create a free account on flashcardmachine.com. After you are logged in, click on “create a new flashcard set.” Fill in the information, being careful to disable flashcard database. If you don’t do this, anyone who uses the site will be able to access your cards. After you’ve filled in the information, click on “save set details.”

Back under the “MyFlashcards” home-screen, click on “manage assets: images.” Use the browse feature to upload each of the individual student files that you’ve created. Be sure to label the uploads.

At the home-screen once more, click on your newly created set. Next, click on “advanced editor” and then “create a new card.” In the “term” section, click on image and then use the “from your collection” bar to use a student photo. In the “definition” section, select “plain text,” fill in the student’s name, and save. Repeat for each student.

Step 5: Drill. Back at the home-screen, click on the set and then on “start study session!”

I’m not promising this won’t be tedious! If anyone can eliminate that part of learning names, you’ll read about it here! Break the drilling into chunks or multitask with your favorite tv show. Even with the tedium, there are three big advantages: 1) you can review throughout the semester, 2) you can import to multiple lists if the student is in other classes, and 3) You can download a Flashcard Machine app for Apple and Android smart phones.

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The editors of theatre-historiography.org bid a fond farewell to Assistant Editor Oona Hatton as she finishes her year of service on the website!  Oona came on board last summer with a wealth of enthusiasm and fantastic suggestions for the sites’ various features, and has tirelessly worked behind the scenes to help us provide great resources and content to the academic theatre world over the past year. Oona is a terrific scholar and a dream to work with. We’ll miss her terribly and wish her all the best in her next endeavors!

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CTR 151, Summer 2012

This issue expands on Canadian formations of Performance Studies by connecting early work in the ethnography of performance with contemporary practices of performance ethnography. Researchers in folklore, anthropology, ethnomusicology, and communications drew on ethnographic methods initially to understand performance as the emergent, creative elaboration of tradition and repertoire, as an approach to a performer’s interactions with an audience, and to explore how cultural performance effects social change or maintains social order. Contemporary performance studies researchers have built on such uses of ethnography and integrated them with practice-based research and critical pedagogy. Contributions to this issue map these intellectual histories and show how researchers work with performance as an embodied way of knowing and as a means of representing ethnographic work. They share innovations in performance writing, collaborative fieldwork, and social or site-specific intervention. The issue demonstrates the transformative vitality of ethnographic practices in the analysis, devising, and pedagogy of performance.

Click here to read the introduction and view the table of contents.

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I developed this exercise in response to an informal conversation I once had with Catherine Cole about the best way to teach students about the ethics of ethnography. I also had the good fortune of looking at class notes from one of my peers at Northwestern who took an ethnography seminar with the great Dwight Conquergood, who did something similar on the first day. Finally, I have borrowed the name of the assignment, “Representing the Other,” from Tamara Roberts’ syllabus for her grad seminar on ethnomusicology at Berkeley.

I introduce this exercise on the first day of class for an upper-division undergraduate seminar on research methods in theatre and performance. After we watch excerpts of Dennis O’Rourke’s classic film, Cannibal Tours, we discuss if the filmmaker has represented his “subjects” fairly (both the Papua New Guineans and the tourists). I then explain that they’re going to get the chance to “study” a classmate and “be studied” that week (I let the students choose their own pairings based on whose schedule meshes better with whose, etc.).

When I pass around the prompt, there are always gasps. Students are excited yet apprehensive: how conspicuous will they be following someone around and taking notes? How will it feel to be the one whose every move is observed?

In our next meeting, we present our “findings” to one another conference-style. I explain to them that as ethnographers, we should present papers as sensitively as if the people we are discussing are in the room with us. The only difference is that this week, they actually are! Our follow-up discussion is eye-opening: some students are delighted at their classmates’ insights about them; others state boldly that the other person “got me all wrong.” In most cases, students are won over to ethnography. At the very least, we all remain attentive to the ethics of research and representation throughout the quarter.

Click here for the assignment

Click here for the course syllabus

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This video blog covers everything you need to know to get started with Pecha Kucha, an exciting and innovative presentation format. Pecha Kucha can be an effective alternative to long lectures based on outlined content in the theatre studies classroom.

Click the videos below to learn about Pecha Kucha and how it works, and to see a sample Pecha Kucha presentation on ideas informing Symbolist Drama.

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Performing Arts Resources, Volume 28, draws together essays by forty historians researching in theatre, film, dance, music, and popular and cultural performance, who were given this direction: to focus on a personal experience with a “tyrannical” document from the archive, a document that would not allow for an otherwise apparent conclusion, that flew in the face of the evidence, or that carried embedded in it some aspect of an event that was incomprehensible, no matter how much additional research was brought to bear on it.

They were asked to reflect on the difficult balance sought among and between the historian’s respect for documentary evidence, the need to generate significance from it, and the natural-but-dangerous tendency to smooth out the rough edges of evidence.

We invite you to read the Introduction to the volume, as well as the Table of Contents.  More about the volume  can be found at  http://www.tla-online.org/publications/par.html

INTRODUCTION
By Stephen Johnson

TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

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Rather than a text-based blog entry, we decided to do a video based blog entry. We trace the long strange journey of creating the first, all-digital textbook for theatre, and talk about some of the unexpected delights and disappointing shortcomings

–Michael O’Hara and Judith Sebesta (authors of Explore Theatre)

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Andy White's "Yes It Is" Exercise at MATC 2012. Photo by Ann Haugo.

In Chicago during the first weekend of March, the Mid-America Theatre Conference held its annual meeting. Scott Magelssen reminded me that the conversation that eventually led to the creation of Theater Historiography: Critical Interventions started at this conference many years ago. To build on the link between the conference, the Bial-Magelssen edited collection, and this website, I decided to address my final blog to the response given by Heather Nathans to the theatre history symposium. In what follows, I’d like to replay a bit of that response, analyze some of the reaction it provoked, and offer my own thoughts on the role of theatre history and theatre historiography within the University.

Nathans played the part of respondent, which meant that she had to act the challenging role of what I call “the synthesizer.” From four days of panels on topics ranging from the accidental immolation of ballerinas to the archive of Penumbra Theatre Company to the economics of local Burning Man events, Nathans located a thru-line and shared her reflections with all of us. Her comments focused on issues of methodology. Specifically, she drew our attention to how we as theatre historians and historiographers talk about our individual objects of study. The underlying purpose of her remarks was not isolated to issues of scholarship but looked outward to our role as scholars of theatre within the University. Her response began with a hypothetical question: if we had a meeting with our University president, and asked him/her to tell us how we as theatre scholars think, for example, about race or identity formation, what would the president say? Nathans posited that the president would be at a loss, and that his/her inability to articulate an answer to that question reflects a shortcoming on our own parts. The president would likely not have a response because we as theatre scholars do not always do a good job explaining how we think about certain issues, how we go about our historical investigations, or how we differentiate ourselves from other practitioners such as art historians or ethnomusicologists.

This focus on methodology and its relationship to self-reflexivity certainly demands our attention.  As audience members pointed out, within Nathans’s call for a more articulate framing of how we do what we do exists a pedagogical challenge. After all, as teachers we should be able to help our students learn the how in addition to the what. Theatre history, as a practice, requires an understanding of the research process as well as an understanding of the basic tenets of, say, the Cid controversy or the main elements of Ancient Greek tragedy. On top of that, and perhaps more obviously, theatre historians and historiographers must place ourselves within our work and formulate a clear notion of how we navigate the archives. Without wishing to challenge either of those beliefs, I would like to trouble another aspect of the group’s reaction to Nathans, as well as an underlying assumption as to the purpose of articulating how we do what we do.

Once the conversation opened up to include comments from the audience, the topic of conversation turned to use. If we develop the ability to explain how we do what we do, then we will be able to prove our use to the University. The vibe of the room transposed to a more lightweight and joyous resonance once people got behind this notion that theatre historians might be able to adequately express our value to the University, thereby securing our position within the liberal arts and, perhaps, gaining access to increased research funds. To be honest, my internal resonance clashed with the predominant tenor of the room at this point. I wondered if our segue from the how-ness of what we do to our use within the University pointed to an obfuscation of the discourse on use pervading the current “crisis.” While listening and reflecting on the discussion that unfolded there in that room, I began to imagine a different way of discussing our position within the University. Finally, some weeks later, I’ve put my thoughts into words and I offer this alternate perspective for your consideration.

To begin this alternate line of thought I’d like to summon Theodor W. Adorno’s essay “On Tradition” (Telos vol. 94 [Winter 93/94]: 75-82). In that work, Adorno explores the dialectic of tradition: on the one hand, a questionable value whose link to the past appears fruitless and useless because of the cult of the new which drives culture forward; on the other hand, an imported article to be valued, but valued only as a curiosity (75). University discourse presents us with both sides of this dialectic. We can see this by thinking about the place of theatre history within this discourse. Theatre history, as a discipline, seems to be out of date; as a practice, it appears as something that once had its place but now serves no clear purpose. At the same time, and because of its out-of-placeness, theatre history is a curiosity, an endeavor that unearths bizarre and titillating rituals from days gone by. The curiosity may lose its charm, however, and deflate into an unarticulated otherness. “The less the bourgeois principle tolerates otherness, the more urgently it appeals to tradition and cites what then appears from the outside as ‘value’” (76). Theatre historians face this shift today, as Nathans pointed out. As theatre history becomes more a curiosity and less of a stable link to the recognizable tradition of liberal arts education, the more it loses its value in the eyes of the University.

As we decide what to do about all of this, I would caution us against arguing within the terms laid down by the University discourse, a discourse thoroughly imbued with the logic of the market. Articulating how we do what we do as theatre historians or historiographers will lead to self-reflexive scholarship, there is little doubt of that. But we should not leverage our ability to articulate the specifics of our scholarly practice as a method for proving our usefulness or value within the University. By working to reveal our use, are we not capitulating to the logic of equal exchange, that principle derived from capitalist economic principles applied to all other social relations? If we prove that our discipline provides a service that has immediate applicability to the working on the University administration, then I think we have already conceded the very terms that we should be disputing.

Adorno’s negative dialectic practice reveals another was of thinking about this problem. “What fails to establish its immediate social usefulness in the market place,” he suggests, speaking specifically of the United States in the 1960s, “does not count and is forgotten. Even when someone dies, it is as if he had never lived; he is as replaceable as anything functional. Only what has no function is irreplaceable!” (75). This last sentence deserves out attention, partially because of the exclamation point but also, and more importantly, because it raises a counter-intuitive path for us to follow. We should not develop tools to prove our value and our usefulness to the University; rather, we should contest the terms of any discussion based on “value” and, simultaneously, work to imagine how consciousness of our functionlessness might enrich our practice as scholars of theatre. What would it mean to embrace our uselessness?

Before discussing this functionlessness or uselessness in more detail, I’d like to offer one final fragment of Adorno’s work that serves as a warning for us all as we decide how to position ourselves in the University:

Those who cherish the past and refuse to surrender their love of it so as not to become impoverished, immediately expose themselves to an insidiously inspired misunderstanding, namely that they might not be so dedicated after all and might even be willing to embrace the present. (77)

There is a tendency in the reception of Adorno’s criticism to dismiss the thinker outright because of what appears to be an ultra-obtuse cantankerousness. Rather than disagree with this statement I’d like to embrace the bristly German philosopher because of the difficulty inherent in that very act of embrace. After all, what would it mean to take this warning seriously? It would surely mean at least two things. First, Adorno’s words force us to reflect on what we’re doing when we approach our object of study. He suggests that we should not cherish those objects of study. We must not think of them as our bread and butter, that off which we make our living.

Second, grappling with Adorno’s ideas means understanding that the present is not something we should embrace. We must not embrace it because the terms of discussion about how to proceed from this moment in time into the future are permeated through and through with a logical positivist rationality that would like to move in a straight line from this moment of crisis to a future moment of normality and stability. As historians and historiographers, surely we recognize that this rectilinear march is fraught with complications and that, at the very least, we should stage a conceptual and practical sit-in to slow the march into the future. To do this, however, would require that we take time to articulate the problem and that, of course, we slow down the works, thus making us visible as part of the problem, which we are, whether we like it or not.

I’d like to continue with this line of thought, but I also want to summon several new figures in order to present a rambunctious collection of ideas through which to think this problem of Use and Uselessness. First: Andrew White, founding member of Lookingglass Theare Company and keynote speaker at MATC this year. In his keynote address, White proposed that we all infuse our work with more play. I conjure this sentiment here because, in addition to the utter seriousness Adorno brings to this discussion, I believe we can think our uselessness as theatre historians and historiographers through the practice of play. Playing around with such weighty matters as the future of our discipline seems utterly irresponsible and, for that very reason, completely necessary. How might we reframe our task away from the act of defending our position and conserving space for ourselves toward, instead, the act of play? Play requires the endless production of ideas—something White displayed through his demonstration of the game “Yes it is.” What is theatre historiography? It is a practice of uncovering the conditions that make possible certain understanding of Nationality in a specific time and place. Yes it is. It is a conscious deconstruction of the concept of the archive as the repository of all knowledge. Yes it is. It is a discipline that acknowledges the fictional dimension of all historical narrative and that proliferates the narrative of history with its own brand of (hopefully self-reflexive) fiction. Yes it is. It is a mode of living. Yes it is. It is a challenge to the discourse on usefulness insofar as it reveals the structures that have obfuscated specific people and events whose usefulness was once in question. Yes it is.

Next: Georges Bataille and Stuart McLean. In his 1933 essay “The Notion of Expenditure,” Bataille asserts the following:

Every time the meaning of a discussion depends upon the fundamental value of the word useful – in other words, every time the essential question touching on the life of human societies is raised, no matter who intervenes and what opinions are expressed – it is possible to affirm that the debate is necessarily warped and that the fundamental question is eluded.

How does usefulness warp the debate? For starters, the notion of usefulness usually presupposes a finite number of ways in which something can become useful, thereby ruling out an array of other, possibly silly, possibly frightening, proposals. McLean, an anthropologist at the University of Minnesota, offered this quotation in his manifesto titled, “WHAT IS THE UNIVERSITY FOR? A STORY FROM THE DREAMTIME OF A POSSIBLE FUTURE” performed at the Beneath the University — The Commons conference a few years ago. In that Manifesto, McLean argues that the question “What is the University for?” makes no more sense than the questions “What is a comet for?” and “What is a dragonfly for?” He makes this point in order to challenge the very terms with which we find ourselves discussing the future of the university.

Instead of those questions, McLean departs from the path most taken and imagines a completely “other” university, one that “occupy a status somewhere between a ritual theater and a blue-sky research laboratory for the self-production of social life as an open-ended project of collective poesis.” “The university as I envision it,” he writes, “would still have its Institutes for Advanced Study but they would be more numerous and various, more open and much weirder – animals, plants and supernatural (or other) beings as visiting professors, perhaps?” Recognizing his fanciful imaginings as off-the-chart, McLean advocates for his irrational vision precisely because it does not intersect with the conversation on how to make ourselves useful but, rather, allows the possibility of a new future.

As we process the information gathered at the recent MATC conference and reflect on Nathans’s response to the theatre history symposium, I’d like us to include the concept of uselessness in the picture. We can imagine our function within the university without capitulating to the current order of things, and we can do this by playing with the existing order. Last week in my theatre history class we studied Dada, a group from whom we can take our cue. The Cabaret Voltaire was, in one way, a salon of the irrational and the nonsensical. It was, at the same time, the site from which we can learn that nonsense is often the index of the sensible. That is, a playful invocation of our useless position within the University can reveal the methods used to construct the discourse that requires us to prove our value to the system. If we work to make ourselves valuable and useful, then I think we will have labored in vain.

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Path 2: De Witt’s Catalogue

To develop a critique of melodrama and to encourage a self-reflexive practice of historical inquiry amongst my students, I want to return to melodrama when study the Black Arts Movement. To do this, I will share the story of my discovery of De Witt’s catalogue of “Ethiopian and Comic Drama,” along with the research that I am currently compiling, in order to unpack the abuses of melodramatic acting. Despite his curmudgeonly attitude and his dated study of the genre, Lacey provides a starting point for this critique. “Strictly speaking, “ he writes, “there are no characters in melodrama, there are only types, easily recognized and constantly recurring, such as the villain, the hero, the ‘persecuted innocent’ and the clown or ‘niais’. There are also, besides these four principles, two other prevailing types, the ‘accomplice’ and the faithful friend’” (20-1). From here, one need only look to the cast list of Pixérécourt’s Christopher Columbus in order to see the problem of these “types.” How did French actors play the “Savages” encountered by Columbus? What gestures and facial expressions did the acting manuals suggest for playing non-French roles? Along with the knowledge that melodrama was used to foster a nationalistic pride in the European countries where it emerged comes the knowledge that national identity relies on the formulation of the Other against which to cement its traits.

The popularity of the “Ethiopian” type in America during the eighteenth century attested to the racist ideology undergirding the American project of nation building. De Witt’s catalogue offers ample evidence that black people, though not exclusively, filled the subject position of Other to counter-balance the white male subject position engineered as dominant. There’s no need to rehearse the scholarship on this topic here, especially because I am by no means an expert on the topic, but I would like to share my findings on the “Ethiopian” type. I would also like to ask for assistance in compiling source material on the “Ethiopian” farce or sketch from those who are more active in this field of study. Or, if you have knowledge of melodrama acting manuals, I would love to learn more about that as well.

In “‘The Trouble Begins at Eight’: Mark Twain, the San Francisco Minstrels, and the Unsettling Legacy of Blackface Minstrelsy” (American Literary Realism vol. 41 No 3 (Spring 2009): 232-248), Sharon D. McCoy tells us that, “In the stage parlance of the day, ‘nigger,’ ‘Ethiopian,’ or even ‘negro’ (uncapitalized) referred not to actual African American performers but to white blackface performers. ‘Colored’ referred to African Americans” (240). John William Mahar offers similar information in Behind the burnt cork mask: early blackface minstrelsy and Antebellum and American Popular Culture (Champaign, IL: University of Illinois Press, 1999). Thus, the long list of play titles in De Witt’s catalogue refer to plays of the minstrel tradition, though not all of them featured blacked-up white performers exclusively. As Mahar states, “it is not clear how many of the characters actually appeared in blackface in any particular skit because the ‘Cast of Characters’ sections of the published Ethiopian sketches rarely indicate whether all the characters blacked up or only those with identifiable African American roles” (157). He points out that, “The sketches were also adaptable to various ethnic groups through slight changes in costuming or dialect,” meaning that these plays also mocked the French, Irish, and Dutch members of New York City’s populace.

Completely by accident, then, I have come across a list of plays that feature disparaging representations of black people and other members of the immigrant population in America paired with Jerrold’s text of Black-Eyed Susan. It seems reasonable to assume that the type characters created in the melodramatic form pioneered by Pixérécourt and then exported to Britain influenced the types portrayed in minstrel plays, and, therefore, that the melodrama form infiltrated the American imagination via racist depictions of the Other. By rehearsing this history with my students, I hope they will find a foothold in the work produced by the Black Arts Movement, which sought to destroy the image of black people created through this European theatrical tradition.

In recent years, when teaching works by black artists, I have discovered that students have little to no understanding of the history behind depictions such as Sambo or Aunt Jemima. Due to the structure of the theatre curriculum, students rarely take classes in Cultural Studies or American Studies where they might encounter materials like Marlon Riggs’s Ethnic Notions and a culturally-specific critique of aesthetic form. As such, teaching material from the Black Arts Movement and more contemporary artists such as Suzan-Lori Parks or Aishah Rahman has proven difficult. The fortuitous, though disturbing, discovery of De Witt’s catalogue has provided me with new material that might help to connect two seemingly distinct plays such as Baraka’s Dutchman and Pixérécourt’s Dog of Montargis, thereby strengthening the critical historiographical methodology I want to teach in my class.

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