从Aura到Awra:走向热带酷儿在菲律宾的非殖民化表演

Q1 Arts and Humanities eTropic Pub Date : 2023-06-30 DOI:10.25120/etropic.22.1.2023.3966
John Paolo Sarce
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引用次数: 0

摘要

如果说datíng指的是文学文本,那么awra指的是酷儿的非殖民化表演。本文从Bienvenido Lumbera和Walter Benjamin的作品中,讨论了“光环”一词的怪异之处,以及它是如何通过beki(同性恋语言)作为awra在热带表演和话语中运作的。“awra”这个标志是从帝国词汇中复活的,并被菲律宾媒体的主题想象所困扰。三个媒体文本阐述了这些说法:Awra Briguela的歌曲“拍手,拍手,拍手”;Maymay Entrata的舞蹈“Amakabogera”;以及中午的电视游戏节目“Beklaban”,这是Beki(同性恋)和laban(打斗)的组合。这篇论文重点介绍了这些媒体文本中使用和表演“awra”一词的时刻,展示了它是如何作为一种狡猾、动态和充满活力的酷儿表演发挥作用的。菲律宾LGBT社区的当地酷儿语言从西方认识论中提取了这个词,并将其用于酷儿热带表演,从而提供了将酷儿非殖民化表演理论化的机会。在这种情况下,当光环变成awra时,它不仅仅是挪用,也不仅仅是复兴这个词及其意义;相反,它是在新的环境和政治中诞生的转世。
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From Aura to Awra: Toward a Tropical Queer Decolonial Performativity in the Philippines
If datíng is to literary texts, awra is to queer decolonial performances.  From the works of Bienvenido Lumbera and Walter Benjamin, this paper discusses the queering of the term aura and how it operates in tropical performances and discourses, through beki (gay language), as awra. The sign “awra” is resuscitated from the imperial lexis and queered by the topical imagination in the Philippine media. Three media texts expound these claims: Awra Briguela’s song “Clap, Clap, Clap, Awra”; Maymay Entrata’s dance “Amakabogera”; and the noontime TV game show “Beklaban,” a portmanteau of Beki (gay) and laban (fight). The paper highlights moments from these media texts that deploy and perform the term “awra” showing how it functions as a slippery, dynamic, and exuberant queer performance. The local queer tongue of the Philippine LGBT community highjacks this word from the Western epistemology and uses it in queer tropical performances, thus providing the opportunity to theorize a queer decolonial performativity. In this case, as aura becomes awra, it is not just appropriation, nor merely reviving of the word and its sense; rather, it is a reincarnation born into new contexts and politics.
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来源期刊
eTropic
eTropic Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
2.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
27
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊最新文献
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