“我们为什么要建墙”:哈德斯敦的霸权、记忆和时事

Pub Date : 2022-07-01 DOI:10.1386/smt_00093_1
Valerie Lynn Schrader
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2019年托尼获奖音乐剧《Hadestown》通过其独特的爵士风格的配乐、创意布景和服装设计,告诉了俄耳甫斯和欧律狄刻的经典希腊神话故事,在这个故事中,俄耳甫s冒险来到黑社会,将他的爱从永恒的苦难中拯救出来。在这篇对音乐剧剧本、演员录制、乐谱和百老汇制作的修辞分析中,我探讨了哈德斯敦如何表达与时事相关的霸权和记忆。Hadestown将黑社会描绘成一片工业荒原,与Persephone的绿色地球形成鲜明对比,使工业和环境相互矛盾,并使观众关注气候变化、难民、无家可归和贫困等问题。哈迪斯被描绘成一个工业大亨和一个剥削工人的霸主,歌曲《我们为什么要建长城》突出了许多用来控制民众的霸权策略。我还探讨了对哈迪斯墙的提及是如何让2016年后体验这部音乐剧的观众对唐纳德·特朗普2016年竞选时承诺在美国南部边境修建一堵墙以遏制移民的尖锐批评的,我认为倒数第二首歌为观众提供了一个与汉娜·阿伦特关于记忆目的的观点一致的信息:我们必须记住过去,或者用哈迪斯敦的话来说,“讲述悲伤的故事”,因为我们希望这次会有不同的结果。Hadestown的信息鼓励观众记住历史的教训,包括与霸权有关的艰难记忆,因为只有通过记住,我们才能从过去吸取教训,并采取必要的行动来面对当前的挑战。
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‘Why We Build the Wall’: Hegemony, memory and current events in Hadestown
Through its unique jazz-inspired score, creative sets and costume design, the 2019 Tony award-winning musical Hadestown tells the classic Greek mythology story of Orpheus and Eurydice, in which Orpheus ventures to the underworld to save his love from an eternity of suffering. In this rhetorical analysis of the musical’s script, cast recording, sheet music and Broadway production, I explore how Hadestown makes statements about hegemony and memory that connect with current events. Hadestown presents the underworld as an industrial wasteland that contrasts with Persephone’s green earth, placing industry and the environment at odds with one another and bringing the audience’s attention to issues including climate change, refugeeism, homelessness and poverty. Hades is presented as an industrial tycoon and a hegemon who exploits his workers, and the song ‘Why We Build the Wall’ serves to highlight the many hegemonic tactics used to maintain control over a populace. I also explore how the references to Hades’ wall provide audiences experiencing the musical after 2016 with a biting critique of Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign promise to build a wall to curb immigration at the United States’ southern border, and I suggest that the penultimate song provides audiences with a message that aligns with Hannah Arendt’s view of the purpose of memory: that we must remember the past or, in the words of Hadestown, ‘tell the sad tale’, because we hope that it might turn out differently this time. The messages in Hadestown encourage theatregoers to remember the lessons of history, including difficult memories related to hegemony, because only through remembering can we learn from the past and take the actions necessary to face our current challenges.
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