{"title":"一个新的女权主义荒诞派?:当代美国戏剧中的女性抗议、愤怒与徒劳","authors":"Emily B. Klein","doi":"10.3138/md-65-1-1187","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"abstract:Absurdism has long been associated with existentialist white male writers like the ones Martin Esslin analysed in The Theatre of the Absurd (1961), which coined the term that came to define a lasting dramatic genre. More recently, however, several female playwrights have begun to reinvent this movement with an uncanny brand of feminist absurdism in their intimate domestic tragicomedies. In this essay, a close reading of Sheila Callaghan’s Women Laughing Alone with Salad (2015) serves as a touchstone for analysing performances of ludic feminist futility in plays by diverse writers including Ruby Rae Spiegel, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Alice Birch, and others. In their festive moments of anti-structural and non-linear oscillation between rage and glee, these plays mark the messy implosion of an outdated feminist political project, first anticipating and later reflecting the political tensions and crises evidenced in women’s voting, activism, and protest practices since the 2016 US presidential election. Often confining their characters within domestic or interior feminized spaces like kitchens, bedrooms, hidden supermarket aisles, or girls’ locker rooms, these playwrights celebrate failure and madness in the lives and labour of their female characters. By transforming historically feminized sites into dynamic spaces of resistance as well as spectacular failure, these performances of excess, from dieting to devouring, precarity to privilege, force audiences to confront cultural blind spots and failed or incomplete work toward efficacious feminist intersectionality. Furthermore, by bridging contemporary women’s anger research with whiteness and affect studies, this essay identifies a nascent trend in US theatre with a growing international profile that engages an updated absurdist rubric within a larger feminist praxis of political revolt.","PeriodicalId":43301,"journal":{"name":"MODERN DRAMA","volume":"65 1","pages":"24 - 51"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2022-03-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A New Feminist Absurd?: Women’s Protest, Fury, and Futility in Contemporary American Theatre\",\"authors\":\"Emily B. Klein\",\"doi\":\"10.3138/md-65-1-1187\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"abstract:Absurdism has long been associated with existentialist white male writers like the ones Martin Esslin analysed in The Theatre of the Absurd (1961), which coined the term that came to define a lasting dramatic genre. More recently, however, several female playwrights have begun to reinvent this movement with an uncanny brand of feminist absurdism in their intimate domestic tragicomedies. In this essay, a close reading of Sheila Callaghan’s Women Laughing Alone with Salad (2015) serves as a touchstone for analysing performances of ludic feminist futility in plays by diverse writers including Ruby Rae Spiegel, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Alice Birch, and others. In their festive moments of anti-structural and non-linear oscillation between rage and glee, these plays mark the messy implosion of an outdated feminist political project, first anticipating and later reflecting the political tensions and crises evidenced in women’s voting, activism, and protest practices since the 2016 US presidential election. Often confining their characters within domestic or interior feminized spaces like kitchens, bedrooms, hidden supermarket aisles, or girls’ locker rooms, these playwrights celebrate failure and madness in the lives and labour of their female characters. By transforming historically feminized sites into dynamic spaces of resistance as well as spectacular failure, these performances of excess, from dieting to devouring, precarity to privilege, force audiences to confront cultural blind spots and failed or incomplete work toward efficacious feminist intersectionality. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
摘要:长期以来,荒诞主义一直与存在主义白人男性作家联系在一起,比如马丁·埃斯林在1961年的《荒诞剧院》中分析的那些作家,该书创造了一个术语来定义一种持久的戏剧流派。然而,最近,几位女性剧作家开始在她们亲密的家庭悲喜剧中用一种神秘的女权主义荒诞主义来重塑这场运动。在这篇文章中,细读希拉·卡拉汉(Sheila Callaghan)的《女人独自笑着吃沙拉》(2015),可以作为分析鲁比·拉·斯皮格尔(Ruby Rae Spiegel)、杰基·西布利斯·德鲁里(Jackie Siblies Drury)、爱丽丝·伯奇(Alice Birch)等不同作家戏剧中荒谬的女权主义徒劳表现的试金石。在愤怒和喜悦之间的反结构性和非线性振荡的节日时刻,这些戏剧标志着一个过时的女权主义政治项目的混乱内爆,首先预测并反映了自2016年美国总统大选以来女性投票、激进主义和抗议实践中所体现的政治紧张和危机。这些剧作家经常把他们的角色限制在家庭或室内女性化的空间里,比如厨房、卧室、隐藏的超市过道或女孩更衣室,他们庆祝女性角色生活和劳动中的失败和疯狂。通过将历史上女性化的场所转变为抵抗和巨大失败的动态空间,这些过度的表演,从节食到吞噬,从不稳定到特权,迫使观众面对文化盲点,以及失败或不完整的工作,以实现有效的女权主义交叉。此外,通过将当代女性的愤怒研究与白人和情感研究联系起来,本文确定了美国戏剧的一个新生趋势,即在更大的女权主义政治反抗实践中,采用了更新的荒诞主义准则。
A New Feminist Absurd?: Women’s Protest, Fury, and Futility in Contemporary American Theatre
abstract:Absurdism has long been associated with existentialist white male writers like the ones Martin Esslin analysed in The Theatre of the Absurd (1961), which coined the term that came to define a lasting dramatic genre. More recently, however, several female playwrights have begun to reinvent this movement with an uncanny brand of feminist absurdism in their intimate domestic tragicomedies. In this essay, a close reading of Sheila Callaghan’s Women Laughing Alone with Salad (2015) serves as a touchstone for analysing performances of ludic feminist futility in plays by diverse writers including Ruby Rae Spiegel, Jackie Sibblies Drury, Alice Birch, and others. In their festive moments of anti-structural and non-linear oscillation between rage and glee, these plays mark the messy implosion of an outdated feminist political project, first anticipating and later reflecting the political tensions and crises evidenced in women’s voting, activism, and protest practices since the 2016 US presidential election. Often confining their characters within domestic or interior feminized spaces like kitchens, bedrooms, hidden supermarket aisles, or girls’ locker rooms, these playwrights celebrate failure and madness in the lives and labour of their female characters. By transforming historically feminized sites into dynamic spaces of resistance as well as spectacular failure, these performances of excess, from dieting to devouring, precarity to privilege, force audiences to confront cultural blind spots and failed or incomplete work toward efficacious feminist intersectionality. Furthermore, by bridging contemporary women’s anger research with whiteness and affect studies, this essay identifies a nascent trend in US theatre with a growing international profile that engages an updated absurdist rubric within a larger feminist praxis of political revolt.