Dramaturgy of Extinction: Sentient Landscapes, Spectral Bodies, and Unthought Worlds in Kris Verdonck’s Conversations (at the end of the world) and SOMETHING (out of nothing)
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Abstract
Abstract Among the challenges posed by the Anthropocene, perhaps none has been more central than redefining ‘the human’ that this epoch seems to name. It is no secret that the European liberal subject has been the directing force of the Anthropocene and the model from which a global humanity, and its globalising technology, has been envisioned. This essay begins by bringing together a diversity interdisciplinary and cross-cultural perspectives to ask: does the Anthropocene mark the realisation of this homogenous human subject, or its end? Extinction seems constitutive of a climate narrative dominated by a Euro-American imaginary, wherein a fixation on endings suggests the anxieties – and the possibilities – of that imaginary coming to an end as a globalising worldview. Two recent performances by Kris Verdonck / A Two Dogs Company, Conversations (at the end of the world) (2017) and SOMETHING (out of nothing) (2019), imagine extinction through scenarios depicting human figures displaced and overtaken by sentient landscapes. Composed of synthetic materials and activated by bio-technical forces, these landscapes scale down a computational planet, embodying an accumulated history of technological progress and human interventions in environments. Extinction, in these works, is not the end, however, but rather the slow dying out of a singular idea of the human subject, if not its singular narrative of technological progress
在人类世带来的挑战中,也许没有比重新定义这个时代似乎命名的“人类”更重要的了。众所周知,欧洲自由主义主体一直是人类世的主导力量,也是全球人类及其全球化技术被设想的典范。本文首先从跨学科和跨文化的角度出发,提出这样一个问题:人类世标志着同质的人类主体的实现,还是它的终结?灭绝似乎是由欧美想象主导的气候叙事的组成部分,在这种叙事中,对结局的执著表明了这种想象随着全球化世界观的终结而走向终结的焦虑和可能性。克里斯·弗东克/ A Two Dogs Company最近的两场表演《对话(世界末日)》(2017)和《虚无》(2019)通过描绘人类被有感情的风景取代和超越的场景来想象灭绝。这些景观由合成材料组成,由生物技术力量激活,缩小了一个计算行星,体现了技术进步和人类对环境干预的积累历史。然而,在这些作品中,灭绝并不是终结,而是人类主体的单一观念的缓慢消亡,如果不是它对技术进步的单一叙述
期刊介绍:
Contemporary Theatre Review (CTR) analyses what is most passionate and vital in theatre today. It encompasses a wide variety of theatres, from new playwrights and devisors to theatres of movement, image and other forms of physical expression, from new acting methods to music theatre and multi-media production work. Recognising the plurality of contemporary performance practices, it encourages contributions on physical theatre, opera, dance, design and the increasingly blurred boundaries between the physical and the visual arts.