Abstract

Technological advancements in sound production provide theatre-makers with new ways of evoking spectres, demons and devils from the Gothic underworld by immersing them within uncanny sonic environments. Extending Isabella van Elferen’s account of the sonic Gothic to contemporary theatre and drawing on first-person interviews with sound designers/composers, this article analyses two critically acclaimed examples of contemporary Australian Gothic theatre: Picnic at Hanging Rock (2016-18), and Wake in Fright (2019-20). It identifies how these performances use disparate sonic strategies to generate unsettling affects (states of trauma, claustrophobia and fear) by immersing their audiences in soundscapes that conjure haunted Australian landscapes and disquieting psychological states. I unpack the significance of the prioritization of sound design in these works and argue that new sound technologies and sonic experiments play a significant role in shaping Gothic theatre in Australia by evoking connections between haunted landscapes and unsettling psychological states. Drawing on interrogations relating to an Australian-specific uncanny and discourse surrounding the ‘settlement’ of Australia - referring to European invasion and the recognition that settlement in Australia is unstable and a cause for cultural anxiety - I argue that the sonic innovations driving these works are substantial and offer new methods for the excavation and confrontation of cultural anxieties through a decentralizing of text and an immersion in states of sonic extremity. In doing so, the works exemplify the Gothic’s development from its colonial roots to its postcolonial and transnational manifestations.

Full Text
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