"alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Standard

"alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces. / Henck, Maryann.
Enacting Nature : Ecocritical Perspectives on Indigenous Performance . ed. / Birgit Däwes; Marc Maufort. Brüssel: Peter Lang Verlag, 2014. p. 85-104 (Dramaturgies; No. 33).

Research output: Contributions to collected editions/worksContributions to collected editions/anthologiesResearch

Harvard

Henck, M 2014, "alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces. in B Däwes & M Maufort (eds), Enacting Nature : Ecocritical Perspectives on Indigenous Performance . Dramaturgies, no. 33, Peter Lang Verlag, Brüssel, pp. 85-104.

APA

Henck, M. (2014). "alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces. In B. Däwes, & M. Maufort (Eds.), Enacting Nature : Ecocritical Perspectives on Indigenous Performance (pp. 85-104). (Dramaturgies; No. 33). Peter Lang Verlag.

Vancouver

Henck M. "alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces. In Däwes B, Maufort M, editors, Enacting Nature : Ecocritical Perspectives on Indigenous Performance . Brüssel: Peter Lang Verlag. 2014. p. 85-104. (Dramaturgies; 33).

Bibtex

@inbook{9c55a4d585964bd7a86f37387446e5c0,
title = "{"}alterNature{"} in Drew Hayden Taylor{\textquoteright}s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces",
abstract = "In the tourism industry, the image of Natives and their relationship to Mother Earth has been romanticized, exoticized, and commodified for the tourist gaze of its primary consumers – white North Americans and Europeans. The Germans, in particular, exhibit an unrivalled fascination with the “red” agenda of “Indianthusiasm” as well as the “green” agenda of environmental awareness and sustainability. In The Berlin Blues (2007), Anishnawbe playwright Drew Hayden Taylor capitalizes on both of these interests by allowing two overly efficient German developers to descend upon the Otter Lake reserve and present their not so modest proposal for the Native theme park OjibwayWorld. This worst practice example of “The Curator{\textquoteright}s Exhibitionism” (Conquergood) provides thought-provoking insights about the dangers of cultural and ecological imperialism in the contested space of Native identity – an identity intricately intertwined with both tradition and land.My proposal will address the enactment of nature in Indigenous performance by fusing discourses of Otherness in performance studies, tourism, and Conquergood{\textquoteright}s framework, “Moral Mapping of Performative Stances Towards the Other,” with postcolonial and ecocritical approaches. Special focus will be placed on the “polymorphously activist tendency” of contemporary third-wave ecocriticism (Slovic), which focuses on using literature as a medium for increasing ethical awareness, illustrating sustainable practices, and engendering political commitment. Not only will I focus on (re)presented interactions between “hosts” and “guests” but also on the performative aspect of language and conventions of discourse that unearth social, political, economic, and environmental injustices. The play{\textquoteright}s caveat, cleverly couched in comic tones, demonstrates how the commodification and ensuing exploitation of cultural as well as ecological spaces can ultimately lead to the creation of a hybridized “alterNature,” e.g. stereotype-perpetuating performances (Dances With Wolves – The Musical) and the re-architecturing of the environment (gigantic seagull-killing laser dreamcatcher, imported buffalo). Especially the play{\textquoteright}s finale offers an ideal springboard for future debates about how inauthentic “alterNature” could be transformed into a more authentic “alterNative” space that simultaneously preserves Native cultural traditions and environmental values as well as reconciles them with economic necessity. ",
keywords = "North American Studies, Drew Hayden Taylor, Drama, Englisch, Native theatre, First Nations Literature, Canadian literature, performance studies, The Berlin Blues, eco-critisism, Indigenous literature, discourses of Otherness, Tourism",
author = "Maryann Henck",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-2-87574-146-2",
series = "Dramaturgies",
publisher = "Peter Lang Verlag",
number = "33",
pages = "85--104",
editor = "Birgit D{\"a}wes and Marc Maufort",
booktitle = "Enacting Nature",
address = "Germany",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - "alterNature" in Drew Hayden Taylor’s The Berlin Blues. Construction and De(con)struction of Contested Spaces

AU - Henck, Maryann

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - In the tourism industry, the image of Natives and their relationship to Mother Earth has been romanticized, exoticized, and commodified for the tourist gaze of its primary consumers – white North Americans and Europeans. The Germans, in particular, exhibit an unrivalled fascination with the “red” agenda of “Indianthusiasm” as well as the “green” agenda of environmental awareness and sustainability. In The Berlin Blues (2007), Anishnawbe playwright Drew Hayden Taylor capitalizes on both of these interests by allowing two overly efficient German developers to descend upon the Otter Lake reserve and present their not so modest proposal for the Native theme park OjibwayWorld. This worst practice example of “The Curator’s Exhibitionism” (Conquergood) provides thought-provoking insights about the dangers of cultural and ecological imperialism in the contested space of Native identity – an identity intricately intertwined with both tradition and land.My proposal will address the enactment of nature in Indigenous performance by fusing discourses of Otherness in performance studies, tourism, and Conquergood’s framework, “Moral Mapping of Performative Stances Towards the Other,” with postcolonial and ecocritical approaches. Special focus will be placed on the “polymorphously activist tendency” of contemporary third-wave ecocriticism (Slovic), which focuses on using literature as a medium for increasing ethical awareness, illustrating sustainable practices, and engendering political commitment. Not only will I focus on (re)presented interactions between “hosts” and “guests” but also on the performative aspect of language and conventions of discourse that unearth social, political, economic, and environmental injustices. The play’s caveat, cleverly couched in comic tones, demonstrates how the commodification and ensuing exploitation of cultural as well as ecological spaces can ultimately lead to the creation of a hybridized “alterNature,” e.g. stereotype-perpetuating performances (Dances With Wolves – The Musical) and the re-architecturing of the environment (gigantic seagull-killing laser dreamcatcher, imported buffalo). Especially the play’s finale offers an ideal springboard for future debates about how inauthentic “alterNature” could be transformed into a more authentic “alterNative” space that simultaneously preserves Native cultural traditions and environmental values as well as reconciles them with economic necessity.

AB - In the tourism industry, the image of Natives and their relationship to Mother Earth has been romanticized, exoticized, and commodified for the tourist gaze of its primary consumers – white North Americans and Europeans. The Germans, in particular, exhibit an unrivalled fascination with the “red” agenda of “Indianthusiasm” as well as the “green” agenda of environmental awareness and sustainability. In The Berlin Blues (2007), Anishnawbe playwright Drew Hayden Taylor capitalizes on both of these interests by allowing two overly efficient German developers to descend upon the Otter Lake reserve and present their not so modest proposal for the Native theme park OjibwayWorld. This worst practice example of “The Curator’s Exhibitionism” (Conquergood) provides thought-provoking insights about the dangers of cultural and ecological imperialism in the contested space of Native identity – an identity intricately intertwined with both tradition and land.My proposal will address the enactment of nature in Indigenous performance by fusing discourses of Otherness in performance studies, tourism, and Conquergood’s framework, “Moral Mapping of Performative Stances Towards the Other,” with postcolonial and ecocritical approaches. Special focus will be placed on the “polymorphously activist tendency” of contemporary third-wave ecocriticism (Slovic), which focuses on using literature as a medium for increasing ethical awareness, illustrating sustainable practices, and engendering political commitment. Not only will I focus on (re)presented interactions between “hosts” and “guests” but also on the performative aspect of language and conventions of discourse that unearth social, political, economic, and environmental injustices. The play’s caveat, cleverly couched in comic tones, demonstrates how the commodification and ensuing exploitation of cultural as well as ecological spaces can ultimately lead to the creation of a hybridized “alterNature,” e.g. stereotype-perpetuating performances (Dances With Wolves – The Musical) and the re-architecturing of the environment (gigantic seagull-killing laser dreamcatcher, imported buffalo). Especially the play’s finale offers an ideal springboard for future debates about how inauthentic “alterNature” could be transformed into a more authentic “alterNative” space that simultaneously preserves Native cultural traditions and environmental values as well as reconciles them with economic necessity.

KW - North American Studies

KW - Drew Hayden Taylor

KW - Drama

KW - Englisch

KW - Native theatre

KW - First Nations Literature

KW - Canadian literature

KW - performance studies

KW - The Berlin Blues

KW - eco-critisism

KW - Indigenous literature

KW - discourses of Otherness

KW - Tourism

M3 - Contributions to collected editions/anthologies

SN - 978-2-87574-146-2

T3 - Dramaturgies

SP - 85

EP - 104

BT - Enacting Nature

A2 - Däwes, Birgit

A2 - Maufort, Marc

PB - Peter Lang Verlag

CY - Brüssel

ER -

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