Duplicity/complicity : misperforming the social drama of disability


Autoria(s): Hadley, Bree J.
Data(s)

01/06/2009

Resumo

In this paper, I investigate the (mis)performance of ‘passing’ in the context of bodies with disabilities. The desire to conceal, control or contain a body’s idiosyncrasies can be a deceitful act, complicit with dominant cultural assumptions about the benefits of fitting in. Passing, and the performative tricks, techniques and prostheses that support the ‘lie’ of passing, upholding a social contract in which a closeting-as-cure approach accommodates discomfort with difference. In this paper, I consider moments of non-passing, where people are caught out by mistakes or deliberate misperformances of the daily social drama of ability and disability. I reference the work of disabled artists Bill Shannon, Aaron Williamson and Katherine Araniello, who re-perform their daily personal interactions in the public sphere as a sort of guerilla theatre. Their work brings hidden assumptions about how disabled people should act and interact to the brink of visibility. It challenges passers-by to confront their complicity in these discourses by pressing them to re-perform their own spontaneous reactions to bodies that misperform the ‘lie’ of normalcy.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/29442/

Relação

http://www.psi15.com/

Hadley, Bree J. (2009) Duplicity/complicity : misperforming the social drama of disability. In PSI 15 : Misperformance : Misfitting, Misfiring, Misreading, Performance Studies international Conference #15, June 24-28, 2009, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia. (Unpublished)

Direitos

Copyright 2009 Bree Hadley

Fonte

Drama; Creative Industries Faculty; Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation

Palavras-Chave #190404 Drama Theatre and Performance Studies #Performing Arts #Spectatorship #Disability
Tipo

Conference Paper