The Shame of Shame: (in) contemporary South African performance | National Inquiry Services Centre

The Shame of Shame

The Shame of Shame: (in) contemporary South African performance

(in) contemporary South African performance

By Abigail Wiese
Size: 170x 240 mm
Pages: 198 pages
ISBN 13: 978-1-920033-93-4 (paperback)
Published: November 2023
Publishers: NISC (Pty) Ltd
Recommended Retail Price: R 375.00
Cover: Paperback

About the book

The Shame of Shame: (in) contemporary South African performance looks at the agency of shame, and how shame is the most intimate of affects and critical in the formation of our sense of Self, regardless of our recognition of it. The Shame of Shame examines contemporary South African performances as a way to think about shame, our unique experiences of shame and how these affective moments of shame might become hauntings that continue to linger, if not faced and given a form/voice/sound. Because the experience of shame is most central to our shaping and sense of Self, it needs to be faced, and not turned away from or mopped up into discarded parts of our memories. The writing of The Shame of Shame is an intimate and self-reflective engagement with shame, and one in which the author asks what it is that she feels in these encounters with shame. She questions how the aesthetics of performance evoked such feelings and how performance made her think about shame differently.

The Shame of Shame is an interdisciplinary study located at the intersection of performance studies, affect theory, shame theory, autoethnography and practice-led/research-led methodology. The Shame of Shame would be a helpful companion to anyone trying to process affects of discomfort, racism, Othering and an abjection of the Self.

Reviewer’s Comments

… this is the first time for me that this kind of affect studies is not self-indulgent, but truly self-reflexive. The originality of this work lies especially in the way it demonstrates a self-reflexive analysis of being touched, moved, affected by specific South-African performances, dealing with South-African history and context.
Professor Ernst van Alphen, Literary Studies, Leiden University, The Netherlands

The book certainly has merit as a strongly felt, thoughtful, and imaginative engagement with the theme of shame in contemporary South African theatre. It brings together a corpus of plays (and performance art, in the case of Stumbling Block) that have not been collected for comparative discussion before, nor have they been considered under the rubric of shame, as a field of high-level research and reflection. The methodology is innovative and speaks to the current zeitgeist in two, related ways: by invoking autoethnography and applying it to the experience afforded by the theatre, and by using a personal, even confessional stye that uses self-observed affect as a legitimate basis for developing knowledge.
Professor David Attwell, Department of English, University of York, UK and University of Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa

About the Authors

At the time of publication of The Shame of Shame: (in) contemporary South African performance (2023) Abigail Wiese was a Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the National Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences hosted by the SARChi Chair in Identities and Social Cohesion in Africa (ISCIA) at Nelson Mandela University, South Africa. Her research interests are broad but she is particularly drawn to considerations around affective atmospheres, economies and encounters that resonate firstly in the body. Her research focuses on shame’s affect and its intersection with performance and how the aesthetics of performance might help to achieve a better understanding of shame. Abigail obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree, Honours degrees in History and Drama from the University of KwaZulu-Natal and completed her doctoral studies at the University of the Western Cape. Along the way, she taught Dramatic Arts and History and has maintained her interest in teaching, assisting on courses, tutoring, and supporting fellow colleagues in their academic endeavours. When this this work was published, much of the ‘making’/’doing’ of her days were spent being a Mother to her nearly five-year old son, a wife, daughter, sister and friend. Whenever she does find herself with an extended moment of silence, she enjoys drawing monochromatic botanicals.

Contents

Acknowledgements 
Preface 
Abbreviations and acronyms 
Introduction 
Chapter 1: Shame, affect and performance
Chapter 2: ‘Body not Body,’ Shame and its dissonance in Gabrielle Goliath’s Stumbling Block 
Chapter 3: Touch, gaze and the disruption of boundaries in Brett Bailey’s Blood Diamond/Terminal 
Chapter 4 Shame and the apathetic bystander in Lara Foot’s Tshepang: The Third Testament 
Chapter 5 South African English-speaking whiteness unpacked in Juliet Jenkin’s Woolworths 
Conclusion
Postscript 
Bibliography 
Index

 

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