'Stripping women of their wombs': Active witnessing of performances of violence

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Abstract

This essay creates a theoretical frame interweaving Jill Dolan's concept of 'finding hope at the theatre' with Michel Foucault's concepts of 'biopower' and 'biopolitics' to argue that spectators' affective responses to performed violence in live theatre include hope and imagining social change. I draw upon my own active witnessing of theatrical performances of two works-Ruined by Pulitzer Prize-winning African-American Lynn Nottage, and Encounter by the Indian-American Navarasa Dance Theater Company. Along with Dolan and Foucault, I draw upon affect scholarship by James Thompson and Patricia T. Clough, and upon theorist Saidiya V. Hartman's discussion of slavery that makes the human into an abject 'non-human'. Continuing forms of female enslavement and resistances to domination are evident in the representations of sexual slavery in the two works. © 2014 International Federation for Theatre Research.

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APA

Katrak, K. H. (2014, March). “Stripping women of their wombs”: Active witnessing of performances of violence. Theatre Research International. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0307883313000539

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