gambaro’s information for foreigners on “percepticide”

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Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

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Page 1: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners

On “percepticide”

Page 2: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

Source noteTaylor, Diana. “Percepticide.” Disappearing

Acts: Spectacles of Gender and Nationalism in Argentina’s “Dirty War.” Durham and London: Duke UP, 1997. 119-138.

Page 3: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

Percepticide: definition“percepticide” refers to a form of willful

blindness that Taylor calls “just looking”“What do we learn to focus on? What are

we trained to overlook?” (121)“The triumph of the atrocity was that it

forced people to look away” (122)percepticide is the opposite of witnessing:

it is an active refusal (out of apathy, or out of fear) to bear witness

Page 4: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

Key IdeaTheatre is not just a force for good and

activism and witness in the world – it does not automatically summon a witness. In fact, it can often discourage witnessing.

Often throughout history, theatrical spectacles in the public sphere have been used as a diversionary tactic, to get us to look away from what is really happening.

Page 5: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

Theatre and terrorism“dealing in disappearance and making the visible

invisible are […] profoundly theatrical. Only in the theatre can the audience believe that those who walk offstage have vanished into limbo.”

“So the theatricality of torture ad terror […] does not necessarily lie in its visibility, but rather in its potential to transform, to recreate, to make the visible invisible, the real unreal” (Disappearing Acts 132, my emphasis).

The question then becomes: how might we use theatre to counteract this process of percepticide? Can theatre become a witness to its dark side?

Page 6: Gambaro’s Information for Foreigners On “percepticide”

How does Griselda Gambaro stage “percepticide”?Gambaro focuses first and foremost on the

audience! “The looking, not the violence, is central.

[…] It strips us of our traditional invisibility as spectators” (Taylor, “Griselda Gambaro…” 170)

This is why “metatheatre” is so important in Information for Foreigners…

Our choice, as spectators – to see, or to look away º becomes the ultimate subject of the play!