From civilisation to regulation: Airports, circus (bodies) and the battle over control
Research output: Contribution to journal › Journal article › Research › peer-review
The performance Airport, directed and written by Kristjàn Ingimarsson and performed by the troupe Neander, played at Theatre Republique, in Copenhagen in November 2015. The five artists in the company are trained in both physical theatre and circus, and the performance explores how an exceptional use of the body and of radical strategies for dealing with situations in a public space—in this case, an airport—can overcome or even subvert many points of restraint and limitation. Airports represent a paradox: they are a starting point for travelling, the potential individual pursuit of goals, and the crossing of borders of all kinds and at the same time a place where you are kept on hold and submit yourself to the utmost regulation and de-individualization. This paradox, when the sharp, hard, linear, and rational frameworks of modern airports are contested by an “other”—that is, by circus artists who do not physically nor mentally surrender to this logic, and who possess skills and will to take up the challenge—is discussed in this article. Setting off from Martin Zerlang’s theorization of the civilizing process and Erika Fischer-Lichte's concept of the transformative power of theatre, the article centres on a detailed performance analysis of Airport.
Translated title of the contribution | Fra civilisation til regulering: Lufthavne, cirkus (kroppe) og kampen om kontrol |
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Original language | English |
Journal | Performance Matters |
Volume | Vol 4 |
Issue number | No 1-2 |
Pages (from-to) | 57-65 |
Number of pages | 9 |
Publication status | Published - 2018 |
- Faculty of Humanities - circus, performance analysis, civilisation
Research areas
Links
- http://performancematters-thejournal.com/index.php/pm/article/view/145
Final published version
ID: 187317698