SKane Aston E
SKane Aston E
SKane Aston E
Elaine Aston
Theatre Journal, Volume 62, Number 4, December 2010, pp. 575-591 (Article)
Feeling the Loss of Feminism: Sarah Kanes Blasted and an Experiential Genealogy of Contemporary Womens Playwriting
Elaine Aston
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feminism has left and how these affect work by subsequent generations of playwrights. These introductory remarks already have touched on some of the impressions feminism has made, from the writers in the 1970s whose remarks reflect that feminism did not press upon their work in equal measure, to Bradwells view of women playwrights as battling a false perception [or impression] of feminism as breast-beating, worthy or proselytising. To summarize: although women playwrights in the 1970s might have had mixed feelings about feminism, it generally had an enabling effect, creating unprecedented opportunities for women playwrights to get their work staged. By contrast, subsequent generations of women playwrights, as my earlier comments suggest, have to contend with a false impression of feminism as an unfashionable ism. Since the 1970s years of the Womens Liberation Movement, it is undoubtedly the case that feminism increasingly has failed to impress younger generations of women. The reasons for this are complex and variously include the demise of feminism as a political movement; feminisms self-reflexive critiques of its failure to recognize differences in the category of women; the sociocultural backlash against feminism; and widely circulating ideas of postfeminism that unhelpfully foster an erroneous belief that feminism is redundant and over. The false impression that postfeminism has made on younger generations of women is one that concerns a number of feminist academics, including Angela McRobbie. In her most recent publication, The Aftermath of Feminism, McRobbie details her troubled feelings about what she identifies as a kind of faux-feminism: the sociocultural appropriation of feminism by media and popular culture that translates words like empowerment and choice . . . into a much more individualistic discourse. In a worst-case scenario, McRobbie argues, this could result in the demise of feminism, in such a way that it will never again rise from the ashes.12 Equally, the plays by women that I turn to here reflect a need to press upon audiences the damaging consequences of a postfeminist impression of feminism. However, because of the unfashionable perceptions of feminism as outlined in this introduction, I argue that from the mid-1990s to the present, attachments to feminism are not explicitly made by contemporary women dramatists, and neither do they advocate a new kind of feminism. Instead, their work lays claim to a renewal of feminism through the adoption of various dramaturgies and aesthetics that work affectively on audiences so that they might feel the loss of feminism, and all, as McRobbies fears suggest, that this loss might entail. With this in mind, I offer a cross-generational mapping of Churchills short play This is a Chair (1997) and Kanes debut play, Blasted (1995). Disinterring Blasted from a masculine cult of in-yer-face-ism, I move to propose a genealogy of contemporary womens playwriting on the British stage that is characterized by an experiential drive to feeling the loss of feminisman experiential drive, I propose, in Ahmeds sense of meaning the experience of having an emotion, and of the affect that leaves its mark or trace or is impressed upon spectators as bodily sensation, emotion and thought.13 As Kane observed of Blasted, the form puts the audience through the material it presents.14 To put the audience through the experiences of rape and war presented in
Angela McRobbie, The Aftermath of Feminism: Gender, Culture and Social Change (London: Sage, 2009), 1. 13 Ahmed, Cultural Politics of Emotion, 6. 14 Sarah Kane, personal letter to Aleks Sierz, 18 January 1999.
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Churchills socialist dramaturgy, This is a Chair also positions that political perspective as vanishing from view. Brechts critical distancing technique of dis-illusioning17 is turned on the spectator as a politically disinterested or dis-illusioned subject. As Churchill reveals the divorce between the personal and the political and the dissolve of a Brechtian-inflected dramaturgy, she opens up the question of how to form attachments to political identities. Coming from the dramatist whose reputation for politicizing strategies of theatrical inventiveness is unsurpassed in modern British theatre, the question Churchill rehearses in This is a Chair is one that resonates for all playwrights concerned with what forms of theatre might serve to dis-illusion audiences of dehumanizing, self-serving interests that conspire against the possibility of making sociopolitical connections to others. Moreover, coming from the playwright who pioneered a feminist theatre culture in British theatre, Churchills question has a particular resonance for womens playwriting that remains committed to what Janelle Reinelt has termed a feminist residue from the Second Waveserious issues [that] have been identified and are still present but . . . are ignored, pushed aside or simply denied.18 In respect of a feminist residue, one scene in This is a Chair is particularly significant. It appears twice in the play and features a mother and father pressuring their daughter to eat. Yes, eat up, Muriel is the mothers refrain that endorses the threatening, patriarchal insistence that the girl eat.19 The doubling of this tiny scene suggests a patriarchal haunting of the contemporary landscape. By showing the masculine remains as a threat to the girl reluctant to be nourished by a special bite from daddys plate,20 Churchill dis-illusions the spectator of a healthy feminine by gesturing to a disempowered feminine at the patriarchal table. McRobbies analysis of post-feminist disorders and of the illegible rage of young women still confined to the patriarchal table though without recourse to a feminist politics now lost to the postfeminist illusion of positivity and progress21 affords a persuasive diagnosis of Muriels trouble. How are young women to cope with the patriarchal leftovers, given the loss of feminism? Churchills question is one that arguably underpins womens playwriting by younger generations of women dramatists whose response, I maintain, is to offer an experiential, viscerally and emotionally charged articulation of feeling the loss of feminism.
17 Loren Kruger reminds us that the first English translation of Verfremdung was dis-illusion and returns to this in favor of alienation as a more accurate means of rendering the sense of critical estrangement Brecht was seeking; see Kruger, Democratic Actors and Post-apartheid Drama: Contesting Performance in Contemporary South Africa, in Contesting Performance: Global Sites of Research, ed. Jon McKenzie, Heike Roms, and C. J. W.-L. Wee (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010), 239. In line with Kruger, dis-illusioning is here intended to suggest the critical estrangement of illusion-based, fourth-wall viewing. 18 Janelle Reinelt, Navigating Postfeminism: Writing Out of the Box, in Feminist Futures?: Theatre, Performance, Theory, ed. Elaine Aston and Geraldine Harris (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2006), 20. 19 Caryl Churchill, This is a Chair (London: Nick Hern Books, 1999), 11, 28. 20 Ibid. 21 McRobbie, Aftermath of Feminism, 100.
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that is [u]nencumbered by ideology.24 However, being unencumbered by ideology forecloses on the political and fails to ask how the emotional overload might be politically affective and effective. Moreover, the move away from the political-theatre isms of the 1970s and 80s (theatres of socialism and feminism) is generally offered as the reason for the turn to an emotional, visceral, experiential style of theatre. While this is a highly plausible explanation, at the same time, it stops short of interrogating the politics of this emotional landscape or of asking how an understanding of the political work of emotions in 1990s society might have a bearing on matters. Helpful in this latter regard is Stjepan Metrovis sociological theorizing of a 1990s Western society characterized by postemotionalism. Metrovi complicates postmodernist thinking by rehearsing an idea of contemporary Western society as postemotional:
It is a society in which people do not react to what, in an earlier era, would have been stirring occurrences and crises. Rather, individuals have become blas, allergic to involvement, yet intelligent enough to know that the events are significant, and perhaps even to know that in an earlier era individuals would have responded with deep emotional empathy, or equally deep emotional antipathy, to particular individuals, and to the events surrounding them.25
The postemotional type is, then, one who knows so much, but is able to feel, genuinely, so little.26 The key word here is genuinely, if one accepts Metrovis findings that, courtesy of the culture industry, what we now have is [a] new hybrid of intellectualized, mechanical, mass-produced emotions.27 For when the packaging of emotions operates to such a degree that it blocks any kind of personal autonomy, then we risk being out of touch with our own feelings.28 We are, as it were, unable to feel our way to thinking for ourselves. Here, also, I think of Churchills This is a Chair, populated by postemotional types unable to feel genuinely in either personal or political matters.29 If the 1990s can be characterized as a postemotional society, then the emotional, experiential form of plays such as Blasted can be argued as a counter-cultural response to the difficulty of genuinely being able to feel. While it does not necessarily follow that experientially styled, in-yer-face theatre politicizes the postemotional characterization of contemporary society (that is, I am not laying claim for all experiential, in-yerface theatre as working in this particular way), it does propose this as a possibility.30
Ibid., 244. David Riesman, Foreword, in Stjepan G. Metrovi, Postemotional Society (London: Sage Publications, 1997), ix. 26 Metrovi, Postemotional Society, 66. 27 Ibid., 26. 28 Ibid., 66. 29 See also my citation of Churchill in footnote 16 above and the importance she attaches to a society in which people can be in touch with their feelings, and in control of their lives (Thurman, Playwright Who Makes You Laugh, 54). 30 Dan Rebellato has staked a similar claim for how in-yer-face plays offer a kind of socialist analysis, though one reconstructed and recast in the experience of capital, and one that operates at the level of feeling and metaphor, rather than explicit analysis; see Rebellato, Because it Feels Fucking Amazing: Recent British Drama and Bodily Mutilation, in Cool Britannia? British Political Drama in the 1990s, ed. Rebecca DMont and Graham Saunders (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008), 202. By the same token, I want to propose a means of thinking about Blasted as a landmark event in the context of womens playwriting, because of the plays experiential formations of feeling and figuring feminism, rather than offering explicit [feminist] analysis.
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31 In this regard, see Alicia Tycers highly insightful analysis of Kanes 4.48 Psychosis in her Victim. Perpetrator. Bystander: Melancholic Witnessing of Sarah Kanes 4.48 Psychosis, Theatre Journal 60, no. 1 (2008): 2336. 32 Sarah Kane, Blasted, in Complete Plays (London: Methuen, 2001), 12. 33 Churchill, This is a Chair, 7. 34 Metrovi, Postemotional Society, 125. The second media moment is the O. J. Simpson trial. 35 Like most playwrights, Kane was reluctant to talk about the meaning of her work. On the other hand, she was self-disclosing about the genesis of Blasted. For details, see Sierz, Sarah Kane, in InYer-Face Theatre, 90121, esp. 100101. 36 Churchill, This is a Chair, 8. 37 Kane, letter to Sierz, 18 January 1999.
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because the assault on my senses was such that applause returned the audience to a normality I simply was not feeling. This kind of assault on the audience is experientially purposeful in its attempt to break the inability to feel a responsibility for the sufferings of others. In terms of the characters, the loss of altruistic feeling is represented in Kanes portrait of Ian as the tabloid journalist who hacks out sexist, racist, and homophobic abuse. Captured, tortured, and sexually violated by the Soldier, Ian is forced to listen, to bear witness to the Soldiers experiences of war. These are, however, experiences he claims he cannot reportthey do not sell papers. Covering [his] . . . own arse,38 Ian fails to uncover feelings and a sense of responsibility for the affairs he sees as foreign to his (national) own. Violating the compositional rules of realism by infiltrating the domestic-hotel realism with her increasingly surreal presentation of the atrocities of war, Kane also captured the male-occupied territory of the female bodyboth in Ians abusive treatment of Cate, and in the refiguring of heterosexual rape, as the Soldier, in turn, rapes Ian. When the violence begins, it begins with the rape of a woman;39 feeling the violent affects of Ians sexual bullying of Cate, and seeing these through to their unstoppable, escalating, epic conclusion, gives emotional weight to seeing a world increasingly lost to a violent, masculinist, phallocentric symbolic order. Kanes starting point for Blastedolder guy rapes younger womanpoints to a connection with feminisms longstanding objections to rape. This feminist connection is amplified if one looks at her three early, unpublished monologues collectively titled Sick, one of which, Comic Monologue, is a feminist Brechtian-styled treatment of a womans experiences of being raped. However, as I have argued elsewhere, Kane put all of this writing to one side, because of wanting to move beyond a second-wave, theatre-as-explicit-feminist style of writing.40 Crucially, this is not to argue a putting to one side of feminist interests, but rather a concern for how to overcome the feminism fatigue of a 1990s postfeminist society. Feminism fatigue, a term I coin as a variation on Metrovis compassion fatigue,41 occurred as a consequence of, on the one hand, the medias representation of secondwave feminism as having outlived its usefulness, and, on the other, its endorsement of girl power as a substitute for feminism. Fatigued by the idea of second-wave feminism, a third-wave generation of women were sold on the postfeminist promise of personal freedom and empowerment. The issue of rape in the early to mid-1990s is one means of measuring the apex of postfeminism, as third-wavers advocated womens rights to sexual empowerment and accused their second-wave sisters of being overly invested in an idea of women as passive sexual victims. For instance, capitalizing on the backlash against second-wave feminism, Katie Roiphe, author of The Morning After, accused rape-crisis feminists of denying women sexual agency.42
Kane, Blasted, 50. The relative lack of critical attention to Cates rape and the manner of its unseen representation is addressed by Kim Solga in Blasteds Hysteria: Rape, Realism, and the Thresholds of the Visible, Modern Drama 50, no. 3 (2007): 34674. 40 See Elaine Aston, Reviewing the Fabric of Blasted, in Sarah Kane in Context, ed. Laurens De Vos and Graham Saunders (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2010), 1327. 41 See Metrovi, Postemotional Society, 26. 42 Katie Roiphe, The Morning After: Sex, Fear, and Feminism (London: Hamish Hamilton, 1994), 84.
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Feehilys debut play, Duck. Performed at the Royal Court in 2003 in a co-production with Max Stafford-Clarks Out of Joint Theatre Company, Duck resumes the girls-introuble theme in a style of dirty (urban and brutal) realism. A later play by Feehily, Dreams of Violence (2009, co-produced by the Soho Theatre and Out of Joint), evinces a more experimental approach. In this play, realism is disturbed by darkly funny dreamscapes, as Feehily dramatizes a feminist activists struggle to campaign on behalf of the exploited female workforce that cleans the offices of city financiers and to cope with her dysfunctional family. A dysfunctional upper-middle-class family is the subject of Polly Stenhams debut drama, That Face, which took the critics by storm when it premiered at the Royal Court in 2007.56 In a twist to the tale of working-class girls in trouble, Stenhams play reveals the cruelty of a privileged class of boarding-school girls and makes monstrous the postfeminist legacy of girl power. Equally, Fiona Evans returns to and updates the subject of the sex wars in her play Scarborough, which dramatizes the newsworthy topic of under-age sex. In an uncanny doubling, Scarborough first reveals a female school teacher in a sexual relationship with a 15-year-old male pupil, then replays this with the gender roles reversed: the school teacher is now male, the pupil female.57 Set in a realistically constructed hotel bedroom (in the Royal Court production, spectators had to perch on bits of bedroom furniture, sit close to the bed, or stand around the sides of the bedroom), the audience was denied their comfort zone of end-on, fourth-wall viewing. This installation of the audience in a moment of theatrical realisman affective experience of enforced intimacyserved to discomfort spectators into feeling the illicit sexual relations of the bedroom scene. Close up and personal, the intensely felt intimacies of these later plays are located in the private sphere, where feelings are spiraling out of control into dreams of violence, sexually illicit relationships, monstrous families, and acts of schoolgirl torture. Realized through a range of experiential dramaturgies, from dirty to uncanny realisms, uncertain and uneasy futures are made visible in the wake of a personal that is no longer political.
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Like US activist bell hooks, debbie tucker green spells her name without capitals. See Aleks Sierz, We All Need Stories: The Politics of In-Yer-Face Theatre, in Cool Britannia?,
60 Lynette Goddard, Staging Black Feminisms: Identity, Politics, Performance (Basingstoke, UK: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007), 185. Goddard specifies Jamaican poet Louise Bennett, African-American poet-playwright Ntozake Shange, and rapper/singers such as Lauryn Hill, Beverley Knight and Jill Scott. 61 debbie tucker green, Stoning Mary (London: Nick Hern Books, 2005), 2. 62 On this point, see also Ken Urban, Cruel Britannia, in Cool Britannia?, 52. 63 Metrovi, Postemotional Society, 26.
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tucker green specifies that the fictional world of the play should be located in whichever country it is being staged in, Stoning Mary dis-illusions audiences of the luxury to look down on others by bringing home the lack of caritas, our inability to care genuinely for others. Equally, following Ahmed, the play reveals how hate sticks to the other,64 and how an emotional hardening toward an enemy other impedes the possibility of being able to feel a way out of an us versus them binary. As tucker greens Husband and Wife, accompanied and prompted by their Egos (a doubling device that serves to highlight the couples self-centered rather than other-centered feelings), duel over the prescription that can save only one of them, each becomes the enemy of the other. The stickiness of words, the rhythms and repetitions of words or truncated lines, create cruel sensations. If youd putcha handsput your hands on me,65 the Wife repeatedly urges her Husband, then he might feel how her body has a greater need for the medicine than his. As neither moves to touch the other, as hands (the Husbands) go into pockets, or as the Wife eyes to the skies itfocus on the floors it,66 so the emotional divide between them hardens into a deadly/deathly distance. Each exists in terror of the other becoming the one who will survive. In the Royal Court production, the intimate hostilities of the couple were juxtaposed with the vastness of the playing space (the auditorium was adapted to create a gladiatorialstyled arena), bringing an epic quality to a personal, domestic quarrel. tucker greens dramaturgy is an aesthetic mix of the personal and the epic, the visceral and the clinical. In contrast to Kanes pure experiential, tucker greens experiential combines with disillusioning techniques (for instance, Brechtian-styled titles announce each scene) so that emotional attachments and clinical detachments are both possible. Arguably, this approach might suggest that a cooler kind of experiential aesthetic is what is called for, as postemotionalism is affected by the emotional/political temperature raised by the events of 9/11, making terror the new globally felt emotion. The kind of experiential assault on the audience that Blasted created might be too hot for spectators feeling the aftershocks of terror/ism. Hence, different dramaturgical tactics are called for to critique a contemporary lack of caritas. In the presentational and experiential drive toward feeling the lack of caritas, tucker green makes explicit hard-hitting feelings about the loss of feminism. Stoning Mary figures feminism fatigue, as an imprisoned Mary awaiting her stoning realizes that not even the women are going to march for her. In the longest and hardest-hitting speech of the play, Mary asks over and over about what happened to the womanist bitches? / . . . The feminist bitches? / . . . The professional bitches. / What happened to them? . . . whadafuckabout them?67 None of them have come out to sign her petitionnot even her older sister, who gives away her ticket for stoning Mary to the corrections officer, can be there for her. Laced through the rhythms of a brutally beautiful poetics of political anger and visually captured in the portrayal of the estranged, alienated intimacy between the sisters is the loss of feminism that makes it impossible to feel genuinely attached to other women. As McRobbie argues: The loss of feminism, the loss of a political love for womanhood which feminism advocated and encouraged,
Ahmed explains how objects become sticky, or saturated with affect, as sites of personal and social tension (Cultural Politics of Emotion, 11). 65 tucker green, Stoning Mary, 3, 66 Ibid., 4. 67 Ibid., 6162.
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McRobbie, Aftermath of Feminism, 122. Enron, which opened in New York in 2010, was forced to close early in its Broadway run at the Broadhurst Theatre. This reversal of the plays British success is attributed by Michael Billington to a damaging review of the play in the New York Times (whose reviewing power punches significant critical weight), the aesthetic conservatism of a theatre culture that likes plays to be rooted in the realist tradition, and lingering suspicion of a young British dramatists right . . . to tackle a profoundly American subject; see Billington, Theatre Blog, 5 May 2010, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/ stage/theatreblog/2010/may/05/enron-broadway-close-early (accessed 15 July 2010). 70 See Tim Adams, I hate to be told somewhere is out of bounds for women, interview with Lucy Prebble, Observer, 5 July 2009, available at http://www.guardian.co.uk/stage/2009/jul/05/lucy-prebbleplaywright-interview-enron (accessed 15 July 2010).
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have begun to force their work on to the London stage,71 Prebble acknowledges, but at the same time finds it hard to account for, the persistent gender inequalities of the theatre profession that keeps womens work out of main spaces: it is scandalous, because you are getting such a one-eyed view of the world in your art, in films in particular. Only half of the world is being asked to do the looking, you know. Like generations of women playwrights before her, Prebble adheres to the idea that there is nowhere a writer, particularly a woman writer, should not go,72 as reflected in the move between her debut representation of a disenfranchised feminine and the Enron world of corporate greed. Yet at the same time, her generation, like generations of women playwrights before her, remains constrained by the gender inequalities that mean that there are places/spaces where it is not possible, as a woman playwright, to goor to go in numbers sufficient to challenge the predominantly one-eyed [maledominated] view of the world. Despite these gender limitations, women playwrights continue with their titanic efforts to force their way onto the British stage. Moreover, the cross-generational feminist connections between Churchill and Kane, the disinterment of Kane and tucker green from in-yer-face-ism, and the constructing of a genealogy of experiential womens playwriting from the 1990s onward all argue for contemporary womens playwriting as characterized by feeling the loss of feminism. While McRobbie traces the illegible rage of a postfeminist feminine in mainstream culture, what all of these women playwrights share in their very different implicit or explicit ways is a commitment to making that rage legible and felt.
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Ibid. Ibid.