Description

Book Synopsis

A tweet by American actor and activist Alyssa Milano, sent on October 15, 2017, opened the floodgates to an outpouring of testimony and witnessing across the Twitterverse that reverberated throughout social media. Facebook status lines quickly began to read “Me too,” and #MeToo was trending. That tweet re-launched the ‘me too’ movement, which was started in 2006 by Tarana Burke.

Performing #MeToo: How Not to Look Away does not attempt to deliver a comprehensive examination of how #MeToo is performed. What it does aim at presenting is a set of perspectives on the events identified as representative of the movement through a lens or lenses that are multinational, as well as work and analysis from a variety of time periods, written in a diversity of styles. By providing this means of engaging with examples of the many interpretations of and responses to the #MeToo movement, and by identifying these responses (and those of audiences) as provocations, of examples of how not to look away, the collected chapters are intended to invite reflection, discussion and, hopefully, incite action.

It gives writers from diverse cultural and environmental contexts an opportunity to speak about this cultural moment in their own voices. There is a wide geographical range and variety of forms of performance addressed in this timely new book. The international group of contributors are based in the UK, USA, Australia, South Africa, Scotland, Canada, India, Italy and South Korea.

The topics addressed by writers include socially engaged practice; celebrity feminism, archive and repertoire; rape/war; misogynistic speech; stage management and intimacy facilitation; key institutions’ responses; spatial practices as well as temporal ones; academic call-outs; caste/class; political contexts; adaptation of classic texts; activist events; bouffon (a clown technique) and audience response

Forms of performance practice include applied theatre, performance protest, verbatim, solo performance, institutional practice, staging of plays, street responses, academic, adaptation of classic text, play reading events and the musical.

Although there is much to read in the media and alternative media on the #MeToo movement, this is the first attempt to analyse the movement from and in such diverse contexts.

Bringing together twelve writers to speak about works they have either performed, witnessed or studied gives the reader a nuanced way of looking at the movement and its impact. It is also an incredible archive of this moment in time that points to its importance.

Suitable for use in several graduate and undergraduate courses, including performance studies, feminist studies, sociology, psychology, anthropology, environmental or liberal studies and social history.

Essential reading for theatre workers, academics, students, and anyone with an interest in feminism, contemporary theatre or human rights. For artists considering projects that include the themes of #MeToo, and for producers and directors of such projects looking for good practices around how to create environments of safety in their organizations, as well as those who wish to organize communities of artists.

For anyone interested in learning more about how to support the movement, or an interest in the specific social narratives told in each individual chapter. For women, feminists and anyone with an interest in the issues.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

Introduction

Judith Rudakoff

  1. “Vital Acts of Transfer”: #MeToo and the Performance of Embodied Knowledge

Shana MacDonald

  1. Bite the Bullet: The Practice of Protest as a Coping Mechanism

Nondumiso Lwazi Msimanga

  1. Resisting Theatre: The Political in the Performative

Effie Samara

  1. Supporting Brave Spaces for Theatre-Makers Post-#MeToo: A Chicago-Based Study on Rehearsing and Performing Intimacy in Theatre

Susan Fenty Studham

  1. We Get It: Calling Out Sexism and Harassment in Australia’s Live Performance Industry

Sarah Thomasson

  1. Toward the Origin of Performing #MeToo: Franca Rame’s The Rape as an Example of Personal and Political Theatre/Therapy

Laura Peja and Fausto Colombo

  1. The Royal Court in the Wake of #MeToo

Catriona Fallow and Sarah Jane Mullan

  1. Dissident Solidarities: Power, Pedagogy, Care

Swati Arora

  1. Conversations with Noura: Iraqi American Women and a Response to A Doll’s House

Mary P. Caulfield

  1. #MeToo Theatre Women Share Their Stories

Yvette Heyliger

  1. Les Zoubliettes: Raging through Laughter—a Feminist Disturbance

Sonia Norris

  1. “I’m the person to speak about myself”: Self-Declaration, Reversal of Power, and Solidarity in The Red Book

Yuh J. Hwang

Appendix: A Primer on the International #MeToo Movement

Elise A. LaCroix

Biographies of Contributors

Performing #MeToo: How Not to Look Away

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      View other formats and editions of Performing #MeToo: How Not to Look Away by Judith Rudakoff

      Publisher: Intellect Books
      Publication Date: 28/04/2023
      ISBN13: 9781789387551, 978-1789387551
      ISBN10: 1789387558

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      A tweet by American actor and activist Alyssa Milano, sent on October 15, 2017, opened the floodgates to an outpouring of testimony and witnessing across the Twitterverse that reverberated throughout social media. Facebook status lines quickly began to read “Me too,” and #MeToo was trending. That tweet re-launched the ‘me too’ movement, which was started in 2006 by Tarana Burke.

      Performing #MeToo: How Not to Look Away does not attempt to deliver a comprehensive examination of how #MeToo is performed. What it does aim at presenting is a set of perspectives on the events identified as representative of the movement through a lens or lenses that are multinational, as well as work and analysis from a variety of time periods, written in a diversity of styles. By providing this means of engaging with examples of the many interpretations of and responses to the #MeToo movement, and by identifying these responses (and those of audiences) as provocations, of examples of how not to look away, the collected chapters are intended to invite reflection, discussion and, hopefully, incite action.

      It gives writers from diverse cultural and environmental contexts an opportunity to speak about this cultural moment in their own voices. There is a wide geographical range and variety of forms of performance addressed in this timely new book. The international group of contributors are based in the UK, USA, Australia, South Africa, Scotland, Canada, India, Italy and South Korea.

      The topics addressed by writers include socially engaged practice; celebrity feminism, archive and repertoire; rape/war; misogynistic speech; stage management and intimacy facilitation; key institutions’ responses; spatial practices as well as temporal ones; academic call-outs; caste/class; political contexts; adaptation of classic texts; activist events; bouffon (a clown technique) and audience response

      Forms of performance practice include applied theatre, performance protest, verbatim, solo performance, institutional practice, staging of plays, street responses, academic, adaptation of classic text, play reading events and the musical.

      Although there is much to read in the media and alternative media on the #MeToo movement, this is the first attempt to analyse the movement from and in such diverse contexts.

      Bringing together twelve writers to speak about works they have either performed, witnessed or studied gives the reader a nuanced way of looking at the movement and its impact. It is also an incredible archive of this moment in time that points to its importance.

      Suitable for use in several graduate and undergraduate courses, including performance studies, feminist studies, sociology, psychology, anthropology, environmental or liberal studies and social history.

      Essential reading for theatre workers, academics, students, and anyone with an interest in feminism, contemporary theatre or human rights. For artists considering projects that include the themes of #MeToo, and for producers and directors of such projects looking for good practices around how to create environments of safety in their organizations, as well as those who wish to organize communities of artists.

      For anyone interested in learning more about how to support the movement, or an interest in the specific social narratives told in each individual chapter. For women, feminists and anyone with an interest in the issues.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements

      Introduction

      Judith Rudakoff

      1. “Vital Acts of Transfer”: #MeToo and the Performance of Embodied Knowledge

      Shana MacDonald

      1. Bite the Bullet: The Practice of Protest as a Coping Mechanism

      Nondumiso Lwazi Msimanga

      1. Resisting Theatre: The Political in the Performative

      Effie Samara

      1. Supporting Brave Spaces for Theatre-Makers Post-#MeToo: A Chicago-Based Study on Rehearsing and Performing Intimacy in Theatre

      Susan Fenty Studham

      1. We Get It: Calling Out Sexism and Harassment in Australia’s Live Performance Industry

      Sarah Thomasson

      1. Toward the Origin of Performing #MeToo: Franca Rame’s The Rape as an Example of Personal and Political Theatre/Therapy

      Laura Peja and Fausto Colombo

      1. The Royal Court in the Wake of #MeToo

      Catriona Fallow and Sarah Jane Mullan

      1. Dissident Solidarities: Power, Pedagogy, Care

      Swati Arora

      1. Conversations with Noura: Iraqi American Women and a Response to A Doll’s House

      Mary P. Caulfield

      1. #MeToo Theatre Women Share Their Stories

      Yvette Heyliger

      1. Les Zoubliettes: Raging through Laughter—a Feminist Disturbance

      Sonia Norris

      1. “I’m the person to speak about myself”: Self-Declaration, Reversal of Power, and Solidarity in The Red Book

      Yuh J. Hwang

      Appendix: A Primer on the International #MeToo Movement

      Elise A. LaCroix

      Biographies of Contributors

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