Posts Tagged ‘ flash mobs ’

disappearing and breaking\/\/remembering the past

March 24, 2010
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disappearing and breaking\/\/remembering the past

Performance is often labeled a disappearance.  By the time it’s happening, it’s already done.  The moment performed is always already in the past.  My present performance has already happened.  And sure, we can wax philosophical all day long about such a statement but it feels like it’s just another way to say that it’s really hard to talk about what performance is.  Performance scholar Richard Schechner says that performance is “restored behavior,” that when we perform, we’re always performing that which has been performed before, albeit in a slightly different way, if for no other reason than the space and time has disappeared.  In this way, performance is about bringing the past into the present.  It’s about remembering.  Now this remembering is often unconscious.  When the President, for example, gives an inaugural address, he is very clearly calling on the performances of presidents past, restoring the genre of the address but putting his own flair on it.  Now, there’s no doubt that the whole thing is about pomp and circumstance, but it is a pomp and circumstance that is American.  In this framing of the event, we forget (as a public) that the restored behavior of past president’s is a

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branding leads to revolution via performance, or how I learned to dress like an indian and bring the british government to its knees

February 24, 2010
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branding leads to revolution via performance, or how I learned to dress like an indian and bring the british government to its knees

During the Boston massacre, six civilians were killed and six more were injured when British troops, garrisoned in Boston, opened fire on an unruly mob.  Seven of the soldiers accused of murder were acquitted.  Two were found guilty of manslaughter and branded as punishment. When I learned about this as a kid in school I had to imagine the scenario as something akin to the OJ trial.  Really, how the fuck do these guys get off!?!  When I learned that John Adams, future president of the United States and all around proponent of and friend to the colonies was the defense attorney, I kind of pulled a Kyle’s mom. Now if you’ve seen the mini-series or read the book John Adams, you’re probably saying “hold on a sec’ mister ari g.  Ol’ Johnny had a plan!  He wanted us to look civilized like the British so they would see that we were not savages!”  And I might say, sure, whatever.  That may have been his plan, but it’s not what led to the revolution and it certainly did not garner any respect from the British.  It was a concerted public performance that led to the revolution that arose out of

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