{"title":"Returning to The Scene of the Crime: Gendered and Racialized Violence in Ana Mendieta’s Rape Scene","authors":"Bryony White","doi":"10.1080/00043249.2023.2239117","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract Ana Mendieta’s Rape Scene (1973) offers a visceral exploration of sexual, gendered, and racialized violence. Mendieta’s re-enactment of the rape of Sarah Ann Ottens, creates a purposefully traumatic, “triggering” scene for her audience to discover. In “returning to the scene of the crime,” Mendieta produces a critical methodology that facilitates a more complex interaction with the traumatic aftermath of gendered and racialized violence, one that refuses and questions the paltry validation and legitimization of gendered and racialized violence by the law and legal systems. In this article, I argue that Mendieta’s reenactment produces a legal excess, intervening in the juridical distribution of the norm, where the performance disavows the normative, regulative impulses associated with ‘law and order’ by allowing other, alternative traumatic affects into the room, ones which escape how crime scenes, and the law more broadly, try to regulate the emotional and affective aftermath of gendered and racialized violence. Through the performance’s triggering affective surplus, Mendieta draws us towards the site of her own racialized flesh, which, I argue, stages a conversation about the law as a system that both produces and naturalizes the violence that inheres in the gendering and racialization of the body.","PeriodicalId":45681,"journal":{"name":"ART JOURNAL","volume":"82 1","pages":"68 - 81"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-04-03","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ART JOURNAL","FirstCategoryId":"1090","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/00043249.2023.2239117","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"艺术学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"ART","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1
Abstract
Abstract Ana Mendieta’s Rape Scene (1973) offers a visceral exploration of sexual, gendered, and racialized violence. Mendieta’s re-enactment of the rape of Sarah Ann Ottens, creates a purposefully traumatic, “triggering” scene for her audience to discover. In “returning to the scene of the crime,” Mendieta produces a critical methodology that facilitates a more complex interaction with the traumatic aftermath of gendered and racialized violence, one that refuses and questions the paltry validation and legitimization of gendered and racialized violence by the law and legal systems. In this article, I argue that Mendieta’s reenactment produces a legal excess, intervening in the juridical distribution of the norm, where the performance disavows the normative, regulative impulses associated with ‘law and order’ by allowing other, alternative traumatic affects into the room, ones which escape how crime scenes, and the law more broadly, try to regulate the emotional and affective aftermath of gendered and racialized violence. Through the performance’s triggering affective surplus, Mendieta draws us towards the site of her own racialized flesh, which, I argue, stages a conversation about the law as a system that both produces and naturalizes the violence that inheres in the gendering and racialization of the body.
摘要Ana Mendieta的《强奸场景》(1973)对性暴力、性别暴力和种族暴力进行了发自内心的探索。Mendieta对Sarah Ann Ottens强奸案的重演,为观众创造了一个有目的的创伤“触发”场景。在“回到犯罪现场”中,Mendieta提出了一种批判性的方法,该方法有助于与性别和种族化暴力的创伤后果进行更复杂的互动,拒绝并质疑法律和法律体系对性别和种族主义暴力的微不足道的确认和合法化。在这篇文章中,我认为门迪耶塔的重演产生了法律上的过度,干预了规范的法律分配,在这种情况下,通过允许其他替代性的创伤影响进入房间,这些创伤影响逃离了犯罪现场和更广泛的法律,试图调节性别化和种族化暴力的情感和情感后果。通过表演引发的情感过剩,Mendieta将我们引向了她自己种族化的身体所在地,我认为,这是一场关于法律的对话,法律是一个既产生又自然化身体性别化和种族化中固有的暴力的系统。