Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability

The Anthropocene is gaining recognition as an epoch in Earth’s history in which mankind is changing the environment and the biosphere (Steffen et.al. 2011). Hotel Pro Forma’s visual opera NeoArctic (2016) and Yggdrasil Dance’s dance meditation Siku Aapoq/ Melting Ice (2015) explore how to aesthetica...

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Main Authors: Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim, Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Föreningen Nordiska Teaterforskare / Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407
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spelling ftsbaarhusojs:oai:ojs.tidsskrift.dk:article/120407 2023-05-15T16:54:59+02:00 Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria 2020-04-30 application/pdf https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407 eng eng Föreningen Nordiska Teaterforskare / Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407/168167 https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407 Nordic Theatre Studies; Vol. 32 No. 1 (2020): Theatre and the Anthropocene; 44-65 Nordic Theatre Studies; Årg. 32 Nr. 1 (2020): Theatre and the Anthropocene; 44-65 2002-3898 0904-6380 Anthropocene Climate change Aesthetics Performativity Dystopia Utopia info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2020 ftsbaarhusojs 2021-05-06T20:31:46Z The Anthropocene is gaining recognition as an epoch in Earth’s history in which mankind is changing the environment and the biosphere (Steffen et.al. 2011). Hotel Pro Forma’s visual opera NeoArctic (2016) and Yggdrasil Dance’s dance meditation Siku Aapoq/ Melting Ice (2015) explore how to aesthetically shape the ecological impact on human existence. The article discusses the performances’ impact on potential responses to the climate crisis. In NeoArctic, human activities have caused “overflow feedback”: a constant flow of digital vistas of pollution, raging weather, temperature rises alternate with the planet’s eternal processes, while underscored by ambience and operatic electro-pop. The images are front-projected onto the stage backdrop to create a literal overflow of the steadfast choir-performers, in which they almost disappear or become ghostly shadows, implying their imminent demise or insignificance on a planetary scale. Siku Aapoq engages with Greenland’s melting icecap: two dancers, Norwegian and Inuit, interact with a fabric understood as the melting ice, while enveloped in evocative lights, the crackling of glaciers, Inuit chants, ambience, and jazz. The Norwegian and the Inuit take turns enacting the ice, suggesting the interconnectedness with nature of both cultures. Both performances seem to invite acceptance of inevitable disaster. Yet, human prevalence is implied in the stagings by convergence of past and future in the present, which suggests that the future is still undecided, and survival depends on an ability to respond to the materiality of the environment that we are already entangled in through a profound sense of beauty. Theoretically, the analyses mainly draw on agential realism (Karen Barad) in order to outline a “para-Anthropo(s)cene aesthetics” that may reach beyond the human and engage spectators in realizing their ethical entanglement and the call for climate action. Considering intentions and reception, and the dystopian nature of the performances, the responses to climate change that the aesthetics may instigate are discussed. Article in Journal/Newspaper inuit Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library
institution Open Polar
collection Aarhus University: OJS at The State and University Library
op_collection_id ftsbaarhusojs
language English
topic Anthropocene
Climate change
Aesthetics
Performativity
Dystopia
Utopia
spellingShingle Anthropocene
Climate change
Aesthetics
Performativity
Dystopia
Utopia
Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim
Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria
Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
topic_facet Anthropocene
Climate change
Aesthetics
Performativity
Dystopia
Utopia
description The Anthropocene is gaining recognition as an epoch in Earth’s history in which mankind is changing the environment and the biosphere (Steffen et.al. 2011). Hotel Pro Forma’s visual opera NeoArctic (2016) and Yggdrasil Dance’s dance meditation Siku Aapoq/ Melting Ice (2015) explore how to aesthetically shape the ecological impact on human existence. The article discusses the performances’ impact on potential responses to the climate crisis. In NeoArctic, human activities have caused “overflow feedback”: a constant flow of digital vistas of pollution, raging weather, temperature rises alternate with the planet’s eternal processes, while underscored by ambience and operatic electro-pop. The images are front-projected onto the stage backdrop to create a literal overflow of the steadfast choir-performers, in which they almost disappear or become ghostly shadows, implying their imminent demise or insignificance on a planetary scale. Siku Aapoq engages with Greenland’s melting icecap: two dancers, Norwegian and Inuit, interact with a fabric understood as the melting ice, while enveloped in evocative lights, the crackling of glaciers, Inuit chants, ambience, and jazz. The Norwegian and the Inuit take turns enacting the ice, suggesting the interconnectedness with nature of both cultures. Both performances seem to invite acceptance of inevitable disaster. Yet, human prevalence is implied in the stagings by convergence of past and future in the present, which suggests that the future is still undecided, and survival depends on an ability to respond to the materiality of the environment that we are already entangled in through a profound sense of beauty. Theoretically, the analyses mainly draw on agential realism (Karen Barad) in order to outline a “para-Anthropo(s)cene aesthetics” that may reach beyond the human and engage spectators in realizing their ethical entanglement and the call for climate action. Considering intentions and reception, and the dystopian nature of the performances, the responses to climate change that the aesthetics may instigate are discussed.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim
Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria
author_facet Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim
Skjoldager-Nielsen, Daria
author_sort Skjoldager-Nielsen, Kim
title Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
title_short Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
title_full Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
title_fullStr Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
title_full_unstemmed Para-Anthropo(s)cene Aesthetics Between Despair and Beauty: A Matter of Response-Ability
title_sort para-anthropo(s)cene aesthetics between despair and beauty: a matter of response-ability
publisher Föreningen Nordiska Teaterforskare / Association of Nordic Theatre Scholars
publishDate 2020
url https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407
genre inuit
genre_facet inuit
op_source Nordic Theatre Studies; Vol. 32 No. 1 (2020): Theatre and the Anthropocene; 44-65
Nordic Theatre Studies; Årg. 32 Nr. 1 (2020): Theatre and the Anthropocene; 44-65
2002-3898
0904-6380
op_relation https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407/168167
https://tidsskrift.dk/nts/article/view/120407
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