Staging the Construction of Place in Two Antarctic Plays

One of the worlds most unusual degrees is the Postgraduate Certificate of Antarctic Studies (PCAS). This summer course, run by the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, includes a fieldtrip to the Ross Sea region of Antarctica, where New Zealands polar activities are concentrated. At the end of t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Nielsen, HEF
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: Palgrave Macmillan 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-47388-4_2
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/134642
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Summary:One of the worlds most unusual degrees is the Postgraduate Certificate of Antarctic Studies (PCAS). This summer course, run by the University of Canterbury in New Zealand, includes a fieldtrip to the Ross Sea region of Antarctica, where New Zealands polar activities are concentrated. At the end of the fieldwork, and before departing Antarctica, a PCAS ritual is to perform a skit about the groups on-ice experiences for the staff of New Zealands Scott Base. Preparing scripts and rehearsing with classmates in December 2011, I was keenly aware that we were feeding into a long tradition of performing in Antarctica. As fifteen of us took to the stage in the dining hall and dramatized such events as the forgotten boots, the sunbathing incident, and the lost pencil, we not only parodied contemporary safety and environmental regulations and reporting mechanisms we also added another layer to Ross Islands performing history. Those performances have taken many guises: Heroic Era explorers transformed the chilly confines of Discovery Hut into the Royal Terror Theatre (Leane 2003; Pearson 2004) and staged the 1862 farce entitled Ticket-of-Leave in the winter of 1902 (Scott 1905, p. 376); Australasian Antarctic Expeditioners performed an original opera called The Washerwomans Secret in Commonwealth Bay in 1912 (Mawson 1915, p. 208); and Jenny Coverack brought the story of Antarctic explorer Robert Falcon Scotts wife Kathleen to Scotts Terra Nova Hut in a site-specific performance of A Father For My Son (2000) in 2006. That stations such as Scott Base have entire rooms dedicated to costumes is testament to the ongoing popularity of performance. Antarctic expeditioners have long recognized the power of theatre to entertain and transport audiences to familiar places back home.