{"title":"Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling: Memory and its materiality","authors":"Ruhanie Perera","doi":"10.1386/chor_00066_1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This article is centred on the performance Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling, which was first performed in 2012. Since then, it has been archived and exhibited in the form of a video work. The performance references key incidents that contributed to its creation: (1) the making of the performance titled My Other History, specifically an archived conversation undertaken as actor research; (2) the censorship of My Other History by the Public Performances Board of Sri Lanka and (3) the embodied actions and objects in the composition of Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling created in response to the memory of the conversation that preceded it. As such, this article employs selected photographs of the performances in order to position artistic choices made, as well as an exploration of the two interconnected performances through their relationship to the memory of war and the lived experience of traumatic events. The performance of Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling thus acts as a reflexive framework that opens up a space where experiences of performance-making can be critically evaluated through embodied witnessing that supports an exchange or transmission of memory through storytelling and how accountability comes to be situated in the practice of performing from the lived experience of violence and trauma.","PeriodicalId":40658,"journal":{"name":"Choreographic Practices","volume":"119 3-4","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Choreographic Practices","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1386/chor_00066_1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"DANCE","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
This article is centred on the performance Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling, which was first performed in 2012. Since then, it has been archived and exhibited in the form of a video work. The performance references key incidents that contributed to its creation: (1) the making of the performance titled My Other History, specifically an archived conversation undertaken as actor research; (2) the censorship of My Other History by the Public Performances Board of Sri Lanka and (3) the embodied actions and objects in the composition of Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling created in response to the memory of the conversation that preceded it. As such, this article employs selected photographs of the performances in order to position artistic choices made, as well as an exploration of the two interconnected performances through their relationship to the memory of war and the lived experience of traumatic events. The performance of Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling thus acts as a reflexive framework that opens up a space where experiences of performance-making can be critically evaluated through embodied witnessing that supports an exchange or transmission of memory through storytelling and how accountability comes to be situated in the practice of performing from the lived experience of violence and trauma.
本文以 2012 年首次上演的表演《真相与讲述之间》(Somewhere Between Truth and Its Telling)为中心。此后,它以视频作品的形式被存档和展出。该表演参考了促成其创作的关键事件:(1) 制作名为《我的另一段历史》的表演,特别是作为演员研究进行的存档对话;(2) 斯里兰卡公共表演委员会对《我的另一段历史》的审查;(3) 《真相与叙述之间的某处》创作中的具体行动和物品,是对之前对话记忆的回应。因此,本文采用了部分演出照片,以定位所做的艺术选择,并通过这两场相互关联的演出与战争记忆和创伤事件的生活体验之间的关系进行探讨。因此,《真实与讲述之间的某处》的表演作为一个反思性框架,开辟了一个空间,在这个空间里,可以通过肢体见证对表演制作的经验进行批判性评估,这种见证通过讲故事来支持记忆的交流或传播,以及如何从暴力和创伤的生活经验出发,在表演实践中建立责任感。
期刊介绍:
Choreographic Practices operates from the principle that dance embodies ideas and can be productively enlivened when considered as a mode of critical and creative discourse. This double-blind peer-reviewed journal provides a platform for sharing choreographic practices, critical inquiry and debate. Placing an emphasis on processes and practices over products, this journal seeks to engender dynamic relationships between theory and practice, choreographer and scholar, so that these distinctions may be shifted and traversed. Choreographic Practices will encompass a wide range of methodologies and critical perspectives such that interdisciplinary processes in performance can be understood as they intersect with other territories in the arts and beyond (for example, cultural studies, psychology, phenomenology, geography, philosophy and economics). In this way, the journal will open up the nature and scope of dance practice as research and draw together diverse bodies of knowledge and ways of knowing to illuminate an emerging and vibrant research area.