Editorial Comment

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER THEATRE JOURNAL Pub Date : 2024-06-06 DOI:10.1353/tj.2024.a929508
Ariel Nereson
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The March issue features two essays that take up distinct sites in Asian American popular performance and demonstrate the diversity of experience, expectation, and intervention found therein, and two essays that theorize performance from very different locations: dirt and drone, other-than-human performers that complicate foundational assumptions about subject, spectator, and actor. As a quartet, the essays energetically mark the beginning of the journal’s next seventy-five years, offering exciting vectors of inquiry that speak to current and evergreen concerns of theatre, dance, and performance studies. Individually, each offers to readers a distinct model of careful, enthusiastic research that broadens the scope of performance studies inquiry.</p> <p>Maria De Simone’s essay introduces (or reintroduces, as the case may be) the reader to the early twentieth-century figure Jue Quon Tai, tracing her performances across North American vaudeville stages and in immigration courtrooms to demonstrate how performance culture impacted the conceptualization of immigration law. De Simone’s essay joins a vibrant conversation in performance studies about performance and the law while also restoring Jue’s fascinating career to already-robust but generally separate histories of early twentieth-century popular entertainment and immigration and citizenship law. In De Simone’s analysis, Jue mobilized her hyphenated Chinese American identity to navigate racist and exclusionary policies on stage and in the courtroom, yet of equal significance is how the extant archive of Jue’s performances documents racialized regimes of perception that were mutually reinforced across aesthetic and legal domains.</p> <p>The entwinement of geopolitics and popular performance continues in Donatella Galella’s exploration of David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori’s 2019 musical <em>Soft Power</em>. For both De Simone and Galella, Asian American identity, critique, and experience form a kind of limit test for the promise of US American democratic inclusion. Galella activates a welcome critique of musical theatre’s affective influence on its audiences and of the ideologies that find support through the deployment of affect and attachment. Through examining the dramaturgy of <em>Soft Power</em> alongside its lyrics, song structure, and performers’ experiences of the work, Galella reconsiders the paradigmatic staging of encounter between “the West” and “Asia” in <em>The King and I</em>. Galella compellingly demonstrates the contemporary reactivations of that encounter and its white supremacist violences in Hwang’s lived experience of anti-Asian violence <strong>[End Page ix]</strong> and its metatheatrical repetition in <em>Soft Power</em> as she builds on Dorinne Kondo’s concept of “reparative creativity” to argue for the production’s significance to Asian American audiences.</p> <p>In her essay on ecological performance, Angenette Spalink takes us to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh as she recounts the 2019 installation <em>Below the Blanket</em>. Weaving together current concerns in performance studies about ecology, care, and ethics into the emerging field of critical plant studies, Spalink analyzes the work of several artists in reorganizing perceptual experience of the garden in order to animate the agency and carework of plants in sustaining all existence. Spalink carefully considers the material and representational lives of sphagnum mosses as she poses possible answers to her question, “how can we ethically encounter plants in performance?” In parsing colonial histories of the field of botany and colonial legacies of humanism on performance practice, as well as their always-present counterhistories and alternatives often articulated through Indigenous and feminist methods, Spalink provides a detailed description and incisive analysis of the interspecies relations that <em>Below the Blanket</em> invites.</p> <p>Challenges to humanism (and, indeed, human existence) are posed by a quite different agent in Eirini Nedelkopoulou’s essay, as she tracks drone performance cultures in the early twenty-first century. 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Editorial Comment
  • Ariel Nereson

The March 2024 issue of Theatre Journal comes on the heels of the landmark seventy-fifth anniversary issue (December 2023, coedited by Laura Edmondson and Sean Metzger) and is my first issue as coeditor. To say that I sense the weight of the journal’s history as I step into this role is an understatement. It has been my good fortune that the four essays that were waiting for me exemplify Theatre Journal’s commitment to publishing new historiographic and theoretical interventions into performance. The March issue features two essays that take up distinct sites in Asian American popular performance and demonstrate the diversity of experience, expectation, and intervention found therein, and two essays that theorize performance from very different locations: dirt and drone, other-than-human performers that complicate foundational assumptions about subject, spectator, and actor. As a quartet, the essays energetically mark the beginning of the journal’s next seventy-five years, offering exciting vectors of inquiry that speak to current and evergreen concerns of theatre, dance, and performance studies. Individually, each offers to readers a distinct model of careful, enthusiastic research that broadens the scope of performance studies inquiry.

Maria De Simone’s essay introduces (or reintroduces, as the case may be) the reader to the early twentieth-century figure Jue Quon Tai, tracing her performances across North American vaudeville stages and in immigration courtrooms to demonstrate how performance culture impacted the conceptualization of immigration law. De Simone’s essay joins a vibrant conversation in performance studies about performance and the law while also restoring Jue’s fascinating career to already-robust but generally separate histories of early twentieth-century popular entertainment and immigration and citizenship law. In De Simone’s analysis, Jue mobilized her hyphenated Chinese American identity to navigate racist and exclusionary policies on stage and in the courtroom, yet of equal significance is how the extant archive of Jue’s performances documents racialized regimes of perception that were mutually reinforced across aesthetic and legal domains.

The entwinement of geopolitics and popular performance continues in Donatella Galella’s exploration of David Henry Hwang and Jeanine Tesori’s 2019 musical Soft Power. For both De Simone and Galella, Asian American identity, critique, and experience form a kind of limit test for the promise of US American democratic inclusion. Galella activates a welcome critique of musical theatre’s affective influence on its audiences and of the ideologies that find support through the deployment of affect and attachment. Through examining the dramaturgy of Soft Power alongside its lyrics, song structure, and performers’ experiences of the work, Galella reconsiders the paradigmatic staging of encounter between “the West” and “Asia” in The King and I. Galella compellingly demonstrates the contemporary reactivations of that encounter and its white supremacist violences in Hwang’s lived experience of anti-Asian violence [End Page ix] and its metatheatrical repetition in Soft Power as she builds on Dorinne Kondo’s concept of “reparative creativity” to argue for the production’s significance to Asian American audiences.

In her essay on ecological performance, Angenette Spalink takes us to the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh as she recounts the 2019 installation Below the Blanket. Weaving together current concerns in performance studies about ecology, care, and ethics into the emerging field of critical plant studies, Spalink analyzes the work of several artists in reorganizing perceptual experience of the garden in order to animate the agency and carework of plants in sustaining all existence. Spalink carefully considers the material and representational lives of sphagnum mosses as she poses possible answers to her question, “how can we ethically encounter plants in performance?” In parsing colonial histories of the field of botany and colonial legacies of humanism on performance practice, as well as their always-present counterhistories and alternatives often articulated through Indigenous and feminist methods, Spalink provides a detailed description and incisive analysis of the interspecies relations that Below the Blanket invites.

Challenges to humanism (and, indeed, human existence) are posed by a quite different agent in Eirini Nedelkopoulou’s essay, as she tracks drone performance cultures in the early twenty-first century. In positioning drone technology as a pharmakon that threatens as much as it promises, thus...

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以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 编辑评论 Ariel Nereson 《戏剧杂志》2024 年 3 月刊是继具有里程碑意义的七十五周年纪念刊(2023 年 12 月刊,由劳拉-埃德蒙森(Laura Edmondson)和肖恩-梅茨格(Sean Metzger)联合主编)之后出版的,也是我担任联合主编的第一期杂志。说我在担任这一职务时感受到了期刊历史的厚重感,实在是轻描淡写。我很幸运,等待我的四篇文章体现了《戏剧杂志》致力于发表新的历史学和理论干预表演的承诺。三月刊刊登了两篇文章,分别论述了亚裔美国人流行表演的独特地点,并展示了其中的经验、期望和干预的多样性;还有两篇文章从截然不同的地点对表演进行了理论分析:泥土和无人机,非人类表演者使关于主体、观众和演员的基本假设复杂化。这四篇文章充满活力,标志着该杂志下一个七十五年的开始,提供了令人兴奋的探索方向,涉及戏剧、舞蹈和表演研究当前和长期关注的问题。每篇文章都为读者提供了一个独特的认真、热情的研究模式,拓宽了表演研究的探索范围。玛丽亚-德-西蒙尼的文章向读者介绍(或重新介绍,视情况而定)了二十世纪初的人物戴觉昆,追溯了她在北美杂耍舞台和移民法庭上的表演,展示了表演文化如何影响移民法的概念化。德-西蒙尼的文章加入了表演研究领域关于表演与法律的热烈讨论,同时也将戴娟娟的精彩生涯还原到二十世纪早期流行娱乐史和移民与公民法史中。根据德-西蒙尼的分析,觉利用她的连名华裔美国人身份,在舞台上和法庭上游刃有余地应对种族主义和排外政策,而同样重要的是,现存的觉的表演档案记录了种族化的认知制度是如何在美学和法律领域相互强化的。在多纳泰拉-加莱拉(Donatella Galella)对大卫-亨利-黄(David Henry Hwang)和让娜-特索里(Jeanine Tesori)2019 年的音乐剧《软实力》(Soft Power)的探索中,地缘政治与流行表演的纠缠仍在继续。对于德西蒙娜和加莱拉来说,亚裔美国人的身份、批判和经历构成了对美国民主包容承诺的一种极限测试。加莱拉对音乐剧对观众的情感影响以及通过情感和依恋找到支持的意识形态进行了值得欢迎的批判。通过对《软实力》的戏剧性、歌词、歌曲结构以及表演者对作品的体验进行研究,加莱拉重新审视了《国王与我》中 "西方 "与 "亚洲 "相遇的范式。加莱拉以多琳-孔多(Dorinne Kondo)的 "补偿性创作 "概念为基础,论证了这部作品对亚裔美国观众的重要意义。在关于生态表演的文章中,安格内特-斯帕林克(Angenette Spalink)将我们带到爱丁堡皇家植物园,讲述了2019年的装置作品《毯子下面》(Below the Blanket)。斯帕林克将当前表演研究中对生态、护理和伦理的关注与新兴的批判性植物研究领域结合起来,分析了几位艺术家的作品,这些作品重组了人们对花园的感知体验,从而将植物在维持一切存在方面的作用和护理工作生动化。斯帕林克仔细研究了泥炭藓的物质生活和表现生活,并对她的问题 "我们如何才能在表演中合乎道德地与植物相遇?"提出了可能的答案。通过解析植物学领域的殖民历史和人文主义在表演实践中的殖民遗产,以及它们始终存在的反历史和通常通过土著和女权主义方法阐述的替代方案,斯帕林克对《毯子下面》所邀请的物种间关系进行了详细描述和精辟分析。在埃里妮-内德尔科普洛(Eirini Nedelkopoulou)的文章中,她追踪了 21 世纪初的无人机表演文化,对人文主义(乃至人类生存)提出了挑战。她将无人机技术定位为一种 "药丸",它的威胁与承诺一样多,因此......
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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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