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The Dark Continent: «African Tales by Shakespeare» and the Experience of Transitional Community
Author(s) -
Dorota Sosnowska
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
pamiętnik teatralny
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2658-2899
pISSN - 0031-0522
DOI - 10.36744/pt.815
Subject(s) - politics , racialization , gender studies , sociology , phallic stage , the arts , racism , femininity , transition (genetics) , aesthetics , political science , visual arts , race (biology) , art , psychology , law , psychoanalysis , biochemistry , chemistry , gene
This text is an analysis of Krzysztof Warlikowski’s 2011 production, African Tales by Shakespeare, tracing the project of community taken up in the performance. The central thesis takes this to be neither a national community nor a dispersed, intersectional coalition, as Bryce Lease has formulated the difference between Polish political and traditional theater, but rather a transitional community—unstable, unsuccessful, and rooted in the experience of political transition. The author, by invoking references to the visual arts present in the performance, points to other community projects emerging from the experience of transition while showing how, when appropriated for the purposes of performance, their meanings change radically. In the masculine, phallic, and violent world of African Tales, art and philosophy born of the experience of femininity are lost, twisted, and forgotten. Among the most important threads of analysis, however, is the way racialization and racism function in the play. From this perspective, the problematic status of the community the play establishes is most clearly seen: as a community of phantasmic, aspirational, transitional whiteness

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