'this ... this ... thing': The Endgame Project, Corporeal Difference, and the Ethics of Witnessing

被引:4
|
作者
Bixby, Patrick [1 ]
机构
[1] Arizona State Univ, English, Tempe, AZ 85287 USA
关键词
Disability studies; Parkinson's disease; Performance studies; The body; Witnessing;
D O I
10.3366/jobs.2018.0224
中图分类号
I0 [文学理论];
学科分类号
0501 ; 050101 ;
摘要
This essay examines a remarkable 2012 production of Endgame (‘the Endgame project’) starring Dan Moran and Chris Jones, longtime New York actors who both live with Parkinson's disease. Rejecting the limiting assumptions imposed upon them by their profession (and the critical tendency to assimilate the disabled body to philosophical abstraction), the actors drew the attention of their audience to corporeal difference as a nexus of observation, contemplation, and appreciation in the theater. But this is not to say that the production somehow arrested the oscillation between affirmation and negation that defines the discursive structures of the play. Rather, it is argued here, the Endgame project enters into this textual uncertainty to highlight precisely those issues that have too often been absented or occluded in critical responses to the play: the ethical difficulties of giving witness to suffering, the problems of disentangling compassion and oppression, the matters of valuing and regulating the body. © Journal of Beckett Studies.
引用
收藏
页码:112 / 127
页数:16
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