Abstract

AbstractThis article presents a comparative analysis of two ethnographic case studies conducted in local theatres in the Slovak town of Komárno and the British city of Coventry. These two locations are very different – one is a small town on the Slovak-Hungarian border and the other an urban centre in the Midlands region of Britain – and yet they are both characterised by the multiethnic and culturally diverse composition of their populations. The two youth theatres in question are also distinct in their genres: one bases its performances on folklore traditions, whereas the other is an avant-garde physical theatre. At the same time, the productions of both groups manifest a deep involvement in the representation of cultural heritage and the current social issues in their respective locations. Drawing on anthropological conceptualisations of theatre as a form of ritualised performance (see Turner, 1969, 1982; Schechner, 1985, 1993), this paper explores the processes and contexts of the enactment of past conflict and/or violence presented by the two theatrical groups in order to engage with traumatic events in local (and national) history. These processes, which embrace the values of cultural diversity and inclusion, are important for the construction of community identities. The liminality of ritualised performance enables actors and audiences to cross social (including ethnicity and class) and temporal boundaries. They reproduce memories of past violence to make sense of present tensions, such as growing nationalism and xenophobia, and to project their vision of the communal future. This often results in the contestation of the very meaning of place, community and belonging. Furthermore, the article demonstrates that such artistic interpretations of the local past and heritage are instrumental in shaping the identities of the participating youth. The comparison of the two cases also reveals noticeable differences between cosmopolitan and ethno-cultural discourses, which are prevalent in imagining the place, history and heritage of Coventry and Komárno respectively.

Highlights

  • A figure appeared clutching a suitcase.Stars and constellations take shape, providing a pathway

  • (Home, show leaflet, 15 September 2019). This rather poetic passage from a show leaflet collected during a performance by the Coventry-based youth physical theatre group imagined a powerful connection between the past, the present and the possible future as they were presented in the city’s historical centre

  • It refers to the notion of ‘home’, which is central to both the ethnographic case studies – the youth physical theatre (Coventry, UK) and the folk-drama group (Komárno, Slovakia) – this article draws upon

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The two theatrical groups we researched actively engage with ideas of culture and heritage by staging public performances that function effectively as ‘heritage events’ They use heritage practice as an arena for social participation, engaging the public in a negotiation of the meanings of local and national identity (Simon, Ashley, 2010). The effect of enacting these powerful memories is amplified by the fact that the performance took place in the garden of Helenka’s original house: which is the ancestral home of Jozef (42), one of the folk-drama group leaders For the audience, such settings give greater authenticity to the play, which in turn authorises whose memory of the past will define the future of this multiethnic but still divided community

The Theatre in the UK City of Culture
CONCEPTUALISING HERITAGE EVENTS AS RITUALISED PERFORMANCE
EXCLUSIVE INCLUSIVIT Y OF HERITAGE PERFORMANCE
Findings
CONCLUSION
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