The 'Dirty Work' of the Lie


Autoria(s): Hadley, Bree; Rajak, Jelena; Filmer, Andrew; Caines, Rebecca; Read, Alan
Data(s)

01/06/2010

Resumo

The panel "Duplicity/Complicity: Performing and Misperforming Lies" at PSi #15 in Croatia in July 2009 examined the half-truths, hidden assumptions and power relations embedded in every act of performance through an analysis of the way bodies, buildings, personae and communities perform and misperform lies. It was a collection of new academic voices from Australia and Croatia, intersecting and colliding and, at times, outright lying, with each other and with commentary from Alan Read. Inspired by this successful adventure in collaborative academic mis-performance, "The ‘Dirty Work’ of the Lie" takes the challenge set by the Prelude Panel at PSI #15 and subjects the ideas emerging from this panel to "friendly fire" in order to build a multi authored response to 'performance that lies', with reference to the work of A Chorus of Women, disabled artists Bill Shannon, Aaron Williamson and Kathryn Araneillo, US dance performer Ann Liv Young and US theatre and festival director Peter Sellars. In doing so, "The 'Dirty Work' of the Lie" provides a reflexive response to the duplicity inherent in the performances, and also in our own academic analyses. With Alan Read acting as interlocutor, each contributor will creatively respond to a paper presented by another, developing the key intersecting issues that emerged through the formation of the panel. These issues include impression management, self-belief and performers who are 'taken in by their own act', the dirty work of taking others in with an act, the guerrilla dimension of lying, the productivity of the lie, and questions of audience engagement and ethics. As a result, this new paper tests how the 'misperformance' of lies across different cultural sites, be it deliberate or accidental, can become a productive – and, indeed, politicised – aspect of cultural performance, betraying accepted attitudes, ideas and structures of authority and offering alternative visions. Through it’s distinctively multi vocal texture, "The 'Dirty Work' of the Lie" also interrogates the modes of analysis available to us, questioning the 'duplicity' in our reflecting, responding and listening to each other as well as the work.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39908/

Publicador

Performance Research

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/39908/1/BHadleyEtAl2010TheDirtyWorkOfTheLie_AuthorsManuscript.pdf

DOI:10.1080/13528165.2010.490448

Hadley, Bree , Rajak, Jelena, Filmer, Andrew, Caines, Rebecca, & Read, Alan (2010) The 'Dirty Work' of the Lie. The 'Dirty Work' of the Lie, 15(2), pp. 123-129.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Taylor & Francis.

Fonte

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

Palavras-Chave #190404 Drama Theatre and Performance Studies #Contemporary Performance #Performativity #Lies, deciet, duplicity
Tipo

Journal Article