编舞污垢:人类世的运动、表演和生态

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER
Diana Looser
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For Spalink, \"dirt\" refers to earthly material such as soil, peat, and fungi that has been removed from its original grounded context and has been culturally reshaped within the framework of performance, where it functions as a vital and agential co-performer along with human actors and dancers. Spalink undergirds her analysis of choreographic dirt with two key concepts. The first is her compound neologism <em>biogeocultography</em>, which denotes \"the structured movement of ecological matter through geographic, biological, and cultural spaces\" (2) and the meanings such movements create. The second concept, <em>performative taphonomy</em> (derived from the processes whereby material remains decompose and become part of the environment), expresses the notion that \"the presence of exhumed ecological matter on page and stage—e.g., dirt—'does' something\" (16). By exploring the many ways in which humans and dirt affect one another, Spalink encourages a more nuanced apprehension of our material entanglement with more-than-human worlds and reveals how dance and performance can provide a productive arena for thinking through the complex problems of the Anthropocene.</p> <p><em>Choreographing Dirt</em> brings together a diverse array of late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century works from North and Central America and Europe: Suzan-Lori Parks's <em>The America Play</em> (1994), Pina Bausch's <em>The Rite of Spring</em> (1975), Eveoke Dance Theatre's <em>Las Mariposas</em> (2010), and Iván-Daniel Espinosa's <em>Messengers Divinos</em> (2018). The author presents a series of absorbing and richly contextualized close readings buttressed by Indigenous and non-Indigenous critical perspectives. She shows how these performances engage dirt as a vital choreographic element to address environmental racism, extractive capitalism, the interplay of human and more-than-human bodies, and an eco-ethics of care.</p> <p>Chapter 1 takes up the trope of digging and disinterment as a mode of African American revisionist historiography in <em>The America Play</em>, extending it to a taphonomical reading by focusing on the Foundling Father's material interactions with the soil itself. Staking the claim that \"soil literally contains information that changes and influences the ways in which we understand and interpret the past\" (24), Spalink uncovers how the Foundling Father's repeated digging movements are political acts that testify to the repetitive physical labor of enslavement and also demonstrate Black resistance and liberation, as he unearths discarded remains previously omitted from the canon of US history. Reciprocally, the soil itself performs as it exhibits evidence of social and environmental injustices. The affective relationship between the character and the soil becomes a means to interrogate dominant historical narratives and bring to light alternative stories and voices.</p> <p>Chapter 2 offers a close reading of the peat moss that coated the stage in Pina Bausch's adaptation of Igor Stravinsky's <em>The Rite of Spring</em>, highlighting how the dancers and peat were mutually altered through their physical interactions. In contrast to economic systems and power structures that reduce peat to a resource, Spalink considers Indigenous relational ontologies that understand peat as part of a more-than-human genealogy. She argues that peat functions both as a material performer and as a metaphor within the narrative: like the sacrificial virgin in the story, dead bodies decompose and become part of the soil; at the same time, peat archives and preserves organic (human) remains, so the dancers' bodies may be marked with such remains. Despite this vitality, however, Spalink wonders about the ethics of extracting the peat from its source and treating it as a prop.</p> <p>In her third chapter, Spalink reads Eveoke Dance Theatre's <em>Las Mariposas</em>, a performance about the Mirabal sisters, who led an underground resistance movement in the 1950s against Dominican dictator <strong>[End Page 592]</strong> Rafael Trujillo and were subsequently assassinated. 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London: Routledge, 2024; pp. 104. <p>In her original and engaging monograph, <em>Choreographing Dirt: Movement, Performance, and Ecology in the Anthropocene</em>, Angenette Spalink attunes us to the importance of dirt in artistic performance, highlighting our profound entwinement with such matter and the broader social and ecological significance of these interrelationships. For Spalink, \\\"dirt\\\" refers to earthly material such as soil, peat, and fungi that has been removed from its original grounded context and has been culturally reshaped within the framework of performance, where it functions as a vital and agential co-performer along with human actors and dancers. Spalink undergirds her analysis of choreographic dirt with two key concepts. The first is her compound neologism <em>biogeocultography</em>, which denotes \\\"the structured movement of ecological matter through geographic, biological, and cultural spaces\\\" (2) and the meanings such movements create. The second concept, <em>performative taphonomy</em> (derived from the processes whereby material remains decompose and become part of the environment), expresses the notion that \\\"the presence of exhumed ecological matter on page and stage—e.g., dirt—'does' something\\\" (16). By exploring the many ways in which humans and dirt affect one another, Spalink encourages a more nuanced apprehension of our material entanglement with more-than-human worlds and reveals how dance and performance can provide a productive arena for thinking through the complex problems of the Anthropocene.</p> <p><em>Choreographing Dirt</em> brings together a diverse array of late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century works from North and Central America and Europe: Suzan-Lori Parks's <em>The America Play</em> (1994), Pina Bausch's <em>The Rite of Spring</em> (1975), Eveoke Dance Theatre's <em>Las Mariposas</em> (2010), and Iván-Daniel Espinosa's <em>Messengers Divinos</em> (2018). 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引用次数: 0

摘要

代替摘要,这里是内容的简短摘录:由:编舞污垢:人类世的运动,表演和生态,作者:Angenette Spalink Diana Looser编舞污垢:人类世的运动,表演和生态。作者:Angenette Spalink。戏剧、生态学与表演研究,第1期。3. 伦敦:劳特利奇出版社,2024;104页。Angenette Spalink在她的原创和引人入胜的专著《污垢的编排:人类世的运动、表演和生态》中,让我们认识到污垢在艺术表演中的重要性,强调了我们与这些问题的深刻纠缠,以及这些相互关系的更广泛的社会和生态意义。对于斯帕林克来说,“泥土”指的是土壤、泥炭和真菌等地球上的物质,这些物质已经从其原始的基础环境中移除,并在表演的框架内进行文化重塑,在表演中,它与人类演员和舞者一起发挥着重要的、能动的共同表演者的作用。斯帕林克用两个关键概念巩固了她对舞蹈污垢的分析。第一个是她的复合新词“生物地理”,指的是“生态物质通过地理、生物和文化空间的结构化运动”(2)以及这种运动所创造的意义。第二个概念是表演埋藏学(源于材料残骸分解并成为环境一部分的过程),表达了“在页面和舞台上挖掘出的生态物质的存在-例如:, dirt - does something”(16)。通过探索人类和泥土相互影响的多种方式,斯帕林克鼓励人们更细致地理解我们与超越人类世界的物质纠缠,并揭示了舞蹈和表演如何为思考人类世的复杂问题提供了一个富有成效的舞台。《尘土》汇集了来自北美、中美洲和欧洲的二十世纪末和二十一世纪初的各种作品:苏珊-洛里·帕克斯的《美国剧》(1994年)、皮娜·鲍什的《春之仪式》(1975年)、埃弗克舞蹈剧院的《拉斯·马里波萨斯》(2010年)和Iván-Daniel埃斯皮诺萨的《神使者》(2018年)。作者以土著和非土著的批评观点为基础,提供了一系列引人入胜的、丰富的语境化的近距离阅读。她展示了这些表演如何将泥土作为一个重要的舞蹈元素,以解决环境种族主义、掠夺性资本主义、人类和超越人类身体的相互作用,以及关怀的生态伦理。第一章将挖掘和挖掘作为《美国戏剧》中非裔美国人修正主义史学的一种模式,通过关注弃婴父亲与土壤本身的物质相互作用,将其扩展到地语学阅读。斯帕林克声称“土壤确实包含改变和影响我们理解和解释过去的方式的信息”(24),他揭示了弃婴之父反复的挖掘运动是如何成为政治行为的,它证明了奴役的重复体力劳动,也展示了黑人的抵抗和解放,因为他挖掘出了以前被美国历史经典遗漏的被丢弃的遗骸。反过来,土壤本身表现为社会和环境不公正的证据。人物与土壤之间的情感关系成为一种质疑主流历史叙事的手段,并揭示了不同的故事和声音。第二章对皮娜·鲍什改编自伊戈尔·斯特拉文斯基的《春之仪式》的舞剧中覆盖在舞台上的泥炭苔藓进行了细致的解读,突出了舞者和泥炭是如何通过身体上的互动相互改变的。与将泥炭减少为一种资源的经济系统和权力结构相反,斯帕林克认为土著关系本体论将泥炭理解为超越人类谱系的一部分。她认为泥炭在叙事中既是一种物质表演者,也是一种隐喻:就像故事中献祭的处女一样,尸体腐烂并成为土壤的一部分;与此同时,泥炭保存并保存了有机(人类)遗骸,因此舞者的身体可能会留下这样的遗骸。然而,尽管有这种活力,斯帕林克对从源头提取泥炭并将其作为道具的道德问题表示怀疑。在她的第三章中,斯帕林克读了Eveoke舞蹈剧院的《Las Mariposas》,这是一部关于Mirabal姐妹的表演,她们在20世纪50年代领导了一场反对多米尼加独裁者拉斐尔·特鲁希略的地下抵抗运动,后来被暗杀。污垢……
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Choreographing Dirt: Movement, Performance, And Ecology In The Anthropocene by Angenette Spalink (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Choreographing Dirt: Movement, Performance, And Ecology In The Anthropocene by Angenette Spalink
  • Diana Looser
CHOREOGRAPHING DIRT: MOVEMENT, PERFORMANCE, AND ECOLOGY IN THE ANTHROPOCENE. By Angenette Spalink. Studies in Theatre, Ecology, and Performance, no. 3. London: Routledge, 2024; pp. 104.

In her original and engaging monograph, Choreographing Dirt: Movement, Performance, and Ecology in the Anthropocene, Angenette Spalink attunes us to the importance of dirt in artistic performance, highlighting our profound entwinement with such matter and the broader social and ecological significance of these interrelationships. For Spalink, "dirt" refers to earthly material such as soil, peat, and fungi that has been removed from its original grounded context and has been culturally reshaped within the framework of performance, where it functions as a vital and agential co-performer along with human actors and dancers. Spalink undergirds her analysis of choreographic dirt with two key concepts. The first is her compound neologism biogeocultography, which denotes "the structured movement of ecological matter through geographic, biological, and cultural spaces" (2) and the meanings such movements create. The second concept, performative taphonomy (derived from the processes whereby material remains decompose and become part of the environment), expresses the notion that "the presence of exhumed ecological matter on page and stage—e.g., dirt—'does' something" (16). By exploring the many ways in which humans and dirt affect one another, Spalink encourages a more nuanced apprehension of our material entanglement with more-than-human worlds and reveals how dance and performance can provide a productive arena for thinking through the complex problems of the Anthropocene.

Choreographing Dirt brings together a diverse array of late twentieth-century and early twenty-first-century works from North and Central America and Europe: Suzan-Lori Parks's The America Play (1994), Pina Bausch's The Rite of Spring (1975), Eveoke Dance Theatre's Las Mariposas (2010), and Iván-Daniel Espinosa's Messengers Divinos (2018). The author presents a series of absorbing and richly contextualized close readings buttressed by Indigenous and non-Indigenous critical perspectives. She shows how these performances engage dirt as a vital choreographic element to address environmental racism, extractive capitalism, the interplay of human and more-than-human bodies, and an eco-ethics of care.

Chapter 1 takes up the trope of digging and disinterment as a mode of African American revisionist historiography in The America Play, extending it to a taphonomical reading by focusing on the Foundling Father's material interactions with the soil itself. Staking the claim that "soil literally contains information that changes and influences the ways in which we understand and interpret the past" (24), Spalink uncovers how the Foundling Father's repeated digging movements are political acts that testify to the repetitive physical labor of enslavement and also demonstrate Black resistance and liberation, as he unearths discarded remains previously omitted from the canon of US history. Reciprocally, the soil itself performs as it exhibits evidence of social and environmental injustices. The affective relationship between the character and the soil becomes a means to interrogate dominant historical narratives and bring to light alternative stories and voices.

Chapter 2 offers a close reading of the peat moss that coated the stage in Pina Bausch's adaptation of Igor Stravinsky's The Rite of Spring, highlighting how the dancers and peat were mutually altered through their physical interactions. In contrast to economic systems and power structures that reduce peat to a resource, Spalink considers Indigenous relational ontologies that understand peat as part of a more-than-human genealogy. She argues that peat functions both as a material performer and as a metaphor within the narrative: like the sacrificial virgin in the story, dead bodies decompose and become part of the soil; at the same time, peat archives and preserves organic (human) remains, so the dancers' bodies may be marked with such remains. Despite this vitality, however, Spalink wonders about the ethics of extracting the peat from its source and treating it as a prop.

In her third chapter, Spalink reads Eveoke Dance Theatre's Las Mariposas, a performance about the Mirabal sisters, who led an underground resistance movement in the 1950s against Dominican dictator [End Page 592] Rafael Trujillo and were subsequently assassinated. Dirt appears...

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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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