当代灾难:2010年代英国气候危机戏剧与表演

IF 0.3 2区 艺术学 0 THEATER CONTEMPORARY THEATRE REVIEW Pub Date : 2022-04-03 DOI:10.1080/10486801.2022.2047035
A. Watson
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引用次数: 0

摘要

摘要通过对表演性气候危机的理解,本文对2010年代英国气候危机剧院(或“CCT”)进行了概述。虽然以前也写过类似的关于戏剧的调查,描述了生态问题,但这篇文章所采取的方法在表演性的应用以及它对2010年代英国戏剧的特殊性方面是不同的:在一个时间和地点,它对生态问题的态度发生了重大转变;更不用说英国是一个“第一世界”文化,每年碳排放量高,影响人类世的历史遗产深远。首先,我展示了表演性如何与生态批判问题和涉及气候危机问题的戏剧相关,并在这里举例探索了埃拉·希克森的《石油》(2016)。然后,我通过几个领域概述了2010年代的英国中央电视台:即,它对人口过剩和儿童焦虑的描述;使用“cli fi”;'缩小表示时间性的方法;人类中心主义问题和后人类主义的阐述;气候危机问题的种族化;以及表演效果和材料成本之间的CCT张力。
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Contemporary Catastrophes: 2010s British Climate Crisis Theatre and Performativity
Abstract With an understanding of climate crisis as informed by performativity, this article offers an overview of 2010s British climate crisis theatre (or, ‘CCT’). While similar surveys of theatre that depict ecological issues have been written before, the approach this article takes is distinct in its application of performativity, as well as its specificity to theatre in 2010s Britain: a time and a place that saw a significant shift in its attitudes towards ecological concerns; not to mention Britain being a ‘first-world’ culture with high yearly carbon emissions and far-reaching historical legacies of effecting the Anthropocene. First, I demonstrate how performativity is relevant to both ecocritical concerns and theatre that involves itself with issues of climate crisis, illustratively exploring Ella Hickson’s Oil (2016) here. I then overview 2010s British CCT through several areas: namely, its depiction of anxieties around overpopulation and children; the use of ‘cli-fi’; ‘zoomed-out’ approaches to representing temporality; issues of Anthropocentrism and articulations of posthumanism; the racialisation of climate crisis concerns; and the tension in CCT between performative affect and material costs.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
期刊介绍: Contemporary Theatre Review (CTR) analyses what is most passionate and vital in theatre today. It encompasses a wide variety of theatres, from new playwrights and devisors to theatres of movement, image and other forms of physical expression, from new acting methods to music theatre and multi-media production work. Recognising the plurality of contemporary performance practices, it encourages contributions on physical theatre, opera, dance, design and the increasingly blurred boundaries between the physical and the visual arts.
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