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More about the three plays
More about the three plays
Three plays from very different contexts—Sophocles’ Electra,
Samuel Beckett’s Not I, and Margaret Edson’s Wit
will provide the source material to stimulate interdisciplinary discussion of these questions. These plays, and our discussions, consider complex and unexplained illness, trauma and distress, conditions that themselves affect and impair communication, life-threatening conditions and end of life care, pain and grief. We will ask what role the pre-linguistic, the bodily, and the affective have in the experiences and relationships that attend such conditions. What ethical and emotional challenges do doctors, nurses, patients, carers and families face in the particular social exchanges that medicine entails?
Those who attend will be encouraged to be active participants in discussions, stimulated by short position papers, round table discussions, and performances of excerpts from all three plays.
Participants
13th October
10.00am-10.30am Coffee and Registration
An introduction to the discussions taking place of the two days, and the key ideas we want to discuss, challenge and test. Contributions from Dr Elizabeth Barry (English, Warwick), Dr Jan Parker (Classics, University of Cambridge), Dr Jane Montgomery Griffiths (Theatre, Monash University, Melbourne), Dr Anne Whitehead (English, University of Newcastle), author of Medicine and Empathy, and others.
In Sophocles’ play, Electra comes out, comes under scrutiny, presenting her symptoms, her pain, her shame. Actors playing her, psychiatrists advising, and directors workshopping the play have to come to a diagnosis – what is wrong with Electra?
But what issues, what judgements and what silencings are in play in her ‘presentation’? What other narratives of her case could be explored?
Associate Professor of Theatre Jane Montgomery Griffiths, who has directed and played various roles in the play numerous times, will open up a discussion of the possible power dynamics and various lines of investigation which could come from Electra’s ‘presenting’. We will end the session with the question of what might ‘restore’, ‘heal’ or ‘be a good end’ for Electra.
12.30pm-1.30pm Lunch (lunch will be available to buy at nearby cafés on the university campus)
Actors playing Electra have talked of their embodying of her trauma-inducing bonds—with her murdered father, her mother, her absent brother.
We will play & replay crucial scenes to ask both actors and ‘audience’ what is going on. How many lines of interpretation can we generate about ‘traumatic’ family relationships, and how might these inform the way we consider the role of family in medical and psychiatric diagnosis and care?
3pm-3.30pm Coffee
There will be a screening of short excerpt from Cracked, a piece of verbatim theatre based on qualitative research in Health Studies at Warwick with young people who have experienced psychosis and their families, followed by responses from Professor Swaran Singh (Warwick Medical School), whose research was the basis for this work, Professor Matthew Broome (Director, Birmingham Institute of Mental Health), and Dr Anna Harpin (Theatre and Performance Studies, Warwick; author of the forthcoming Disordered: Madness and Cultural Representation (2018))
5-6pm Talk by artist Emma Barnard and drinks
14th October
Communication and empathy: a case study. Presentations and a round table discussion about Möbius syndrome, a facial paralysis condition, and the obstacles it presents to communication and empathy for those with the condition and those close to them. This sessions will look at the role played by theatrical practice and improvisation in John Michael’s recent work helping young people with Möbius syndrome compensate through voice and gesture. We will reflect on what experiences of the condition and the role of the body and performance in coping with it tell us about the face and empathy, about embodiment and emotion. We will also draw related insights from masked theatre on communicating through prosody and gesture. With Professor Jonathan Cole (Neurology), author of The Invisible Smile (with Henrietta Spalding) and About Face, Dr John Michael (Philosophy), and Dr Jan Parker (Classics)
11.15am—11.30am Coffee
The session will open with short presentations on Beckett’s play Not I and its applications in medical settings by Dr Elizabeth Barry (English, Warwick) and Dr Jonathan Heron (IATL, Warwick), and there will follow an experiential workshop on the play, and structured discussion.
1.00pm-2.00pm Lunch
This session looks at the issues of empathy and ethics raised by Margaret Edson’s Pulitzer prize-winning play, Wit, and the application they might have to research synergies between medical and performance studies. The panel will start, by way of a provocation, with a short paper by Dr Jane Montgomery Griffiths (Monash University), using last year’s Melbourne production of Wit as a case study. It will address the semiotic significance of the body in performance as a tool for empathy and look at the differences between the frames of live and recorded performance, before opening up to a general discussion.
4pm-4.15 Coffee