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Hermeneutic color-blindness and the shadow-writing of power: A hermeneutic analysis of Howard Barker’s Scenes from an Execution

Hermeneutic color-blindness and the shadow-writing of power: A hermeneutic analysis of Howard Barker’s Scenes from an Execution
Hermeneutic color-blindness and the shadow-writing of power: A hermeneutic analysis of Howard Barker’s Scenes from an Execution
This essay seeks to approach and explore Scenes from an Execution (1985, henceforth SFE) - the third play in Howard Barker’s 1980s trilogy – also including No End of Blame and Pity in History. The trilogy primarily concerns itself with the problematic nature and function of art in conjunction with the ethical, existential, and aesthetic vicissitudes the artist undergoes in his/her encounter with historical cataclysms and socio-political restrictions. What distinguishes SFE from the other two plays, however, is that it has a female artist as its protagonist; a characteristic which in turn ushers in the problematics concomitant with the question of gender (including discursive strategies, such as the hysterization of the female subject, and phallocentric values and normalizing binarisms (reason-passion (madness), unity-multiplicity/fluidity, normality-abnormality, rule/restraint-excess/ transgression) which aim to un/mis-represent and subject the female artist. Equally crucial is the problem of the representation of the event coupled with the questions of (self-)knowledge, perspectivalism, and of (the authority on) meaning in general, and the meaning of the artwork in particular. The aforementioned issues constitute the focal points of SFE, around which the tensions between the artist and the State of Venice revolve too. Indeed, one of the pivotal problems, which poses a formidable challenge to Galactia, is how to reconcile personal preoccupation and ethical commitment (to personally-perceived truth) with state commission and discursively sanctioned truth. On this premise, it is my argument that the question of hermeneutics constitutes the crux of the play. Hermeneutics, as this essay shall seek to demonstrate, concerns self-knowledge, the possibility of unified or multiple meaning(s), epistemological implications of aesthetic style, and the ethics of representation. Accordingly, exploring the foregoing issues in the light afforded by a hermeneutic approach shall help us unfold and understand some of the complications concerning the issues of art, selfhood, meaning and truth in this play.
Howard Barker, Scenes from an Execution, Hermeneutics, gendered body, ethics of representation, aesthetics of the style, Gadamer, Habermas, Ricoeur
1-36
Fakhrkonandeh, Alireza
01a37fed-90cb-4b0c-a72e-32276e951e5f
Fakhrkonandeh, Alireza
01a37fed-90cb-4b0c-a72e-32276e951e5f

Fakhrkonandeh, Alireza (2017) Hermeneutic color-blindness and the shadow-writing of power: A hermeneutic analysis of Howard Barker’s Scenes from an Execution. New Theatre Quarterly, 1-36, [1]. (In Press)

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Abstract

This essay seeks to approach and explore Scenes from an Execution (1985, henceforth SFE) - the third play in Howard Barker’s 1980s trilogy – also including No End of Blame and Pity in History. The trilogy primarily concerns itself with the problematic nature and function of art in conjunction with the ethical, existential, and aesthetic vicissitudes the artist undergoes in his/her encounter with historical cataclysms and socio-political restrictions. What distinguishes SFE from the other two plays, however, is that it has a female artist as its protagonist; a characteristic which in turn ushers in the problematics concomitant with the question of gender (including discursive strategies, such as the hysterization of the female subject, and phallocentric values and normalizing binarisms (reason-passion (madness), unity-multiplicity/fluidity, normality-abnormality, rule/restraint-excess/ transgression) which aim to un/mis-represent and subject the female artist. Equally crucial is the problem of the representation of the event coupled with the questions of (self-)knowledge, perspectivalism, and of (the authority on) meaning in general, and the meaning of the artwork in particular. The aforementioned issues constitute the focal points of SFE, around which the tensions between the artist and the State of Venice revolve too. Indeed, one of the pivotal problems, which poses a formidable challenge to Galactia, is how to reconcile personal preoccupation and ethical commitment (to personally-perceived truth) with state commission and discursively sanctioned truth. On this premise, it is my argument that the question of hermeneutics constitutes the crux of the play. Hermeneutics, as this essay shall seek to demonstrate, concerns self-knowledge, the possibility of unified or multiple meaning(s), epistemological implications of aesthetic style, and the ethics of representation. Accordingly, exploring the foregoing issues in the light afforded by a hermeneutic approach shall help us unfold and understand some of the complications concerning the issues of art, selfhood, meaning and truth in this play.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 December 2017
Keywords: Howard Barker, Scenes from an Execution, Hermeneutics, gendered body, ethics of representation, aesthetics of the style, Gadamer, Habermas, Ricoeur

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Local EPrints ID: 429131
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/429131
PURE UUID: eedb9153-28c8-48fa-8e2e-341c50917358

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Date deposited: 21 Mar 2019 17:31
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 16:14

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