Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage

In an aesthetics of trauma, debbie tucker green gives voice to marginalized and politically minor voices which she directs in her writing as one would a symphonic orchestra. Her texts, which draw simultaneously from poetry, song lyric writing and musical score, question the nature of theatre. As a b...

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Main Author: Lea Sawyers
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Centre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte" 2018-11-01
Series:Sillages Critiques
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/7707
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author Lea Sawyers
author_facet Lea Sawyers
author_sort Lea Sawyers
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description In an aesthetics of trauma, debbie tucker green gives voice to marginalized and politically minor voices which she directs in her writing as one would a symphonic orchestra. Her texts, which draw simultaneously from poetry, song lyric writing and musical score, question the nature of theatre. As a black woman, writing black characters for a mainly white audience, the strategies of dramatic composition which she resorts to rely on a poetics of absence and create a theatre immune to accusations of didacticism of which her forbearers were often taxed. Indeed, the representation of the public political debate is strikingly absent of tucker green’s otherwise highly politicized stage. AIDS, genocides, domestic violence, incest, civil wars, public executions are all accessed through the prism of deeply personal subjective human experience. Characters on tucker green’s stage see their subjecthood caught in an “in-between”. Neither straightforwardly spectral, nor entirely anchored in an unambiguous dramatic situation, the subject is approached through stereophony as each spectator is confronted to their feelings of empathy and left to negotiate their own hermeneutic path between solo melodies and choral symphonies, between a highly contextualized understanding of the play, and universal reading of the performance. Paradoxically, debbie tucker green therefore redefines 21st century In-yer-face theatre through absence. At odds with the visual frontality of Sarah Kane or Mark Ravenhill, the playwright’s writing focuses its provocative potency on the ear. Characters on stage bleed, tear at each other and love passionately, but most of the drama takes place in and through the language they use. Armed with silence and the weight of the unsaid, tucker green carves a musical score haunted by ghost melodies produced by compositional techniques akin to musical counterpoint, arpeggios and the canon. This paper proposes a reflection on the political consequences of such patterns. What are the terms of the representations of trauma on tucker green’s In-yer-face stage and what part does musicality play in the poetics and politics of such representations?
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spelling doaj-art-994cf15cfeab486cae9668c47b015aae2025-01-30T13:47:04ZengCentre de Recherche "Texte et Critique de Texte"Sillages Critiques1272-38191969-63022018-11-012510.4000/sillagescritiques.7707Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear StageLea SawyersIn an aesthetics of trauma, debbie tucker green gives voice to marginalized and politically minor voices which she directs in her writing as one would a symphonic orchestra. Her texts, which draw simultaneously from poetry, song lyric writing and musical score, question the nature of theatre. As a black woman, writing black characters for a mainly white audience, the strategies of dramatic composition which she resorts to rely on a poetics of absence and create a theatre immune to accusations of didacticism of which her forbearers were often taxed. Indeed, the representation of the public political debate is strikingly absent of tucker green’s otherwise highly politicized stage. AIDS, genocides, domestic violence, incest, civil wars, public executions are all accessed through the prism of deeply personal subjective human experience. Characters on tucker green’s stage see their subjecthood caught in an “in-between”. Neither straightforwardly spectral, nor entirely anchored in an unambiguous dramatic situation, the subject is approached through stereophony as each spectator is confronted to their feelings of empathy and left to negotiate their own hermeneutic path between solo melodies and choral symphonies, between a highly contextualized understanding of the play, and universal reading of the performance. Paradoxically, debbie tucker green therefore redefines 21st century In-yer-face theatre through absence. At odds with the visual frontality of Sarah Kane or Mark Ravenhill, the playwright’s writing focuses its provocative potency on the ear. Characters on stage bleed, tear at each other and love passionately, but most of the drama takes place in and through the language they use. Armed with silence and the weight of the unsaid, tucker green carves a musical score haunted by ghost melodies produced by compositional techniques akin to musical counterpoint, arpeggios and the canon. This paper proposes a reflection on the political consequences of such patterns. What are the terms of the representations of trauma on tucker green’s In-yer-face stage and what part does musicality play in the poetics and politics of such representations?https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/7707traumapolitical theatrecontemporary British theatredebbie tucker greenIn-yer-face theatremusicality
spellingShingle Lea Sawyers
Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
Sillages Critiques
trauma
political theatre
contemporary British theatre
debbie tucker green
In-yer-face theatre
musicality
title Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
title_full Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
title_fullStr Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
title_full_unstemmed Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
title_short Traum-A-Rhythmia On Debbie Tucker Green’s In-Yer-Ear Stage
title_sort traum a rhythmia on debbie tucker green s in yer ear stage
topic trauma
political theatre
contemporary British theatre
debbie tucker green
In-yer-face theatre
musicality
url https://journals.openedition.org/sillagescritiques/7707
work_keys_str_mv AT leasawyers traumarhythmiaondebbietuckergreensinyerearstage