Performing abjection: staging Joyce’s inscription of bodies
conference contribution
posted on 2013-01-01, 00:00authored byFrances Devlin-Glass
This paper raises the t/horny question of performing (as opposed to reading) Joyce’s representation of the body. It emerges out of twenty years of performance of Joyce’s texts, and the challenges they represent, specifically in the matter of enacting abjection, on the stage. When the abject is theorized, it is frequently in the contexts of power, or melancholia or horror. What is fascinating about Joyce’s treatment of bodies is that the context is usually that of comedy, and the rigorous and critical analysis of codes and conventions surrounding the right and proper body. While it is tempting to play for laughs and shock effects that elicit laughter, and directors frequently do, the paper asks if there are limits to staging Joyce’s most abject moments, and whether to do so is to dishonor or cheapen Joyce’s insanely meticulous methods of building character.
History
Event
Joycean Worlds Conference (2013 : Dunedin, New Zealand)
Publisher
University of Otago
Location
Dunedin, New Zealand
Place of publication
Dunedin, New Zealand
Start date
2013-10-03
End date
2013-10-05
Language
eng
Publication classification
E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed
Title of proceedings
Joycean Worlds Conference : Program and abstracts of the Joycean Worlds Conference 2013