Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant

In this article, Jacobson examines the ways in which the Trinity Pageant in Trinity, Newfoundland, Canada aims to animate local culture through a two-hour walking tour around the town’s historic sites that is largely predicated on a sense of realness. Using interviews with audience members and the p...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jacobson, Kelsey
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Toronto 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204
id ftuninewbrunojs:oai:ojs.journals.lib.unb.ca:article/31204
record_format openpolar
spelling ftuninewbrunojs:oai:ojs.journals.lib.unb.ca:article/31204 2023-05-15T17:22:02+02:00 Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant Jacobson, Kelsey 2020-06-16 application/pdf text/html https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204 eng eng Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Toronto https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204/1882526431 https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204/1882526432 https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204 Copyright (c) 2018 Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches théâtrales au Canada Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches théâtrales au Canada; Volume 39, Number 1 (2018) 1913-9101 1196-1198 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion research-article 2020 ftuninewbrunojs 2022-07-11T11:51:22Z In this article, Jacobson examines the ways in which the Trinity Pageant in Trinity, Newfoundland, Canada aims to animate local culture through a two-hour walking tour around the town’s historic sites that is largely predicated on a sense of realness. Using interviews with audience members and the pageant’s director Donna Butt as primary source material, Jacobson considers the perception and function of realness in the pageant’s re-enactment. She first uses theories of site-specificity, historical re-enactment, and theatrical time to consider the various forms of the “real” at work in the production. Jacobson then suggests the work that might be accomplished by such affectively real performance, as both a marker and maker of real identity, supported by the theories of Elin Diamond and Erin Hurley. Using concepts from Rebecca Schneider and Tracy C. Davis, Jacobson also argues that the affective time created by the pageant’s blending of past history and present-day performance creates a future imperative in which audience members are compelled to save the authentic culture they have just witnessed. Finally, she considers the implicitly conservative preservationist impulse that underscores the pageant’s re-enactment to trouble notions of inclusion, belonging, and community. Dans cette contribution, Kelsey Jacobson examine comment le Trinity Pageant, un spectacle présenté à Terre-Neuve, cherche à illustrer la culture locale au moyen d’une visite à pied de deux heures des lieux historiques du village de Trinity qui repose en grande partie sur un sentiment de réalité. En se servant comme source primaire d’entretiens menés avec des membres du public et la metteure en scène du spectacle, Donna Butt, Jacobson s’intéresse à la perception et à la fonction du réel dans la reconstitution que propose le spectacle Trinity Pageant. S’appuyant dans un premier temps sur des théories liées à la spécificité au lieu, à la reconstitution historique et au temps théâtral, Jacobson examine les diverses formes du «réel» qui sont à ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Newfoundland Terre-Neuve University of New Brunswick: Centre for Digital Scholarship Journals Canada Hurley ENVELOPE(51.350,51.350,-66.283,-66.283) Kelsey ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040)
institution Open Polar
collection University of New Brunswick: Centre for Digital Scholarship Journals
op_collection_id ftuninewbrunojs
language English
description In this article, Jacobson examines the ways in which the Trinity Pageant in Trinity, Newfoundland, Canada aims to animate local culture through a two-hour walking tour around the town’s historic sites that is largely predicated on a sense of realness. Using interviews with audience members and the pageant’s director Donna Butt as primary source material, Jacobson considers the perception and function of realness in the pageant’s re-enactment. She first uses theories of site-specificity, historical re-enactment, and theatrical time to consider the various forms of the “real” at work in the production. Jacobson then suggests the work that might be accomplished by such affectively real performance, as both a marker and maker of real identity, supported by the theories of Elin Diamond and Erin Hurley. Using concepts from Rebecca Schneider and Tracy C. Davis, Jacobson also argues that the affective time created by the pageant’s blending of past history and present-day performance creates a future imperative in which audience members are compelled to save the authentic culture they have just witnessed. Finally, she considers the implicitly conservative preservationist impulse that underscores the pageant’s re-enactment to trouble notions of inclusion, belonging, and community. Dans cette contribution, Kelsey Jacobson examine comment le Trinity Pageant, un spectacle présenté à Terre-Neuve, cherche à illustrer la culture locale au moyen d’une visite à pied de deux heures des lieux historiques du village de Trinity qui repose en grande partie sur un sentiment de réalité. En se servant comme source primaire d’entretiens menés avec des membres du public et la metteure en scène du spectacle, Donna Butt, Jacobson s’intéresse à la perception et à la fonction du réel dans la reconstitution que propose le spectacle Trinity Pageant. S’appuyant dans un premier temps sur des théories liées à la spécificité au lieu, à la reconstitution historique et au temps théâtral, Jacobson examine les diverses formes du «réel» qui sont à ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Jacobson, Kelsey
spellingShingle Jacobson, Kelsey
Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
author_facet Jacobson, Kelsey
author_sort Jacobson, Kelsey
title Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
title_short Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
title_full Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
title_fullStr Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
title_full_unstemmed Through the Fictive to the Real(ish): Affective Time and the Representation of “Real Newfoundland” in Rising Tide Theatre’s Trinity Pageant
title_sort through the fictive to the real(ish): affective time and the representation of “real newfoundland” in rising tide theatre’s trinity pageant
publisher Centre for Drama, Theatre and Performance Studies, University of Toronto
publishDate 2020
url https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204
long_lat ENVELOPE(51.350,51.350,-66.283,-66.283)
ENVELOPE(-96.542,-96.542,56.040,56.040)
geographic Canada
Hurley
Kelsey
geographic_facet Canada
Hurley
Kelsey
genre Newfoundland
Terre-Neuve
genre_facet Newfoundland
Terre-Neuve
op_source Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches théâtrales au Canada; Volume 39, Number 1 (2018)
1913-9101
1196-1198
op_relation https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204/1882526431
https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204/1882526432
https://journals.lib.unb.ca/index.php/TRIC/article/view/31204
op_rights Copyright (c) 2018 Theatre Research in Canada / Recherches théâtrales au Canada
_version_ 1766108259759947776