University of Lincoln
Browse

[Special Issue of Studies in Theatre and Performance] Performance and the Right: Strategies and Subterfuges

journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-03, 15:01 authored by Pedro de Senna, James HudsonJames Hudson
<p dir="ltr">Theatre and performance scholarship has exhaustively theorised the nature of the political dimensions of drama: its strategies, capacities and materiality, with its inherent potential as a site of collision with existing assumptions and values repeatedly emphasised. The maxim "all theatre is political" has long been a staple axiom of the theatre academic, usually accompanied by an acknowledgement that some theatre is more political than others: essentially, that which questions dominant narratives and structures of understanding. It ought to be no surprise that the bulk of scholarship that addresses political theatre tends to explore its emancipatory potential. A considerable corpus of theory and practice, very much inflected and influenced by political movements and identity politics, has concerned itself with analysing, portraying, and representing points of view typically associated with the politics of the left (problematic and provisional as such definitions may be). Since political performance has a long-established Marxist (and post-Marxist) tradition, it has sought to problematise and question established power-relations and socio-economic structures, engaging with, and operating in, the axis of the personal/political, and being associated with radical projects of resistance.Nonetheless, while scholarship on political theatre acknowledges that there are plays and performances that may be reactionary through a combination of form and content, comparatively little recent work has treated this notion to sustained interrogation, examined specific work in the light of it, or analysed the mechanics of its operation in detail. At present, while the rise in right-wing nationalisms across the globe has been analysed from a variety of perspectives, and by a number of disciplines - sociology, media studies, international relations, economics, and cultural studies - little substantive attention has heretofore been given to the relationships between theatre and performance and these reactionary forces. This Special Issue works to redress this, turning away from the more usual associations with the left's habitual concerns and dealing more broadly with theatre and performance's relation to the right - even if this relation is a critical one. It addresses the resurgence of right-wing political thought to conduct analyses of its modes of expression, performative dimensions and affective capacities as it is manifested in the contemporary global theatrical and performance culture. In sum, this Special Issue stakes a claim for a scholarly appreciation of the operationality of the continuum of right-wing, conservative and reactionary politics all the way from the recent recrudescence of the "classical liberal" to the nativist and authoritarian as they currently appear in global theatre and performance cultures.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln School of Creative Arts (Research Outputs)
  • College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Studies in Theatre and Performance

Volume

41

Issue

3 (Special Issue: Performance and the Right: Strategies and Subterfuges)

Publisher

Taylor and Francis

ISSN

1468-2761

eISSN

2040-0616

Date Submitted

2019-10-09

Date Accepted

2021-04-01

Date of First Publication

2021-09-02

Date of Final Publication

2021-09-27

ePrints ID

37743

Usage metrics

    University of Lincoln (Research Outputs)

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC