AccessMyLibrary provides FREE access to over 30 million articles from top publications available through your library.

Keynote speech from the twenty-eighth mid-America theatre conference, changing theatrical landscapes: mapping new directions in history, pedagogy, and practice in the twenty-first century.

Theatre History Studies

| January 01, 2008 | Bellamy, Lou | COPYRIGHT 2008 The University of Alabama Press. This material is published under license from the publisher through the Gale Group, Farmington Hills, Michigan.  All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Gale Group. (Hide copyright information)Copyright

I'm inspired by the boldness of the challenge of this conference's theme. As I thought about it while preparing this talk, I even began to wax creative and found myself becoming excited over the possibilities. "Mapping new directions" offers the opportunity to reevaluate, to extend the reach and understanding of ourselves as well as those for whom we perform and those whom we mentor and teach; to set new frameworks through which we perceive our history, our pedagogy, our practice; to understand ourselves and our power to change our world more thoroughly. It's a mandate that has as its basic tenet opening our institutions and our curricula to populations and cultures heretofore only marginally served.

Once I began to think in these lofty terms it was only a very short time before the latent "Trekkie" in me took over and I was imagining myself standing at the helm of the Enterprise, facing new frontiers and "boldly go[ing] where no man has gone before."

What did I mean, "no man"? Well, I meant me. Not no man. Me, It was here that I began to feel a bit of dread. Not from fear of the unknown, but something that began to rise from within myself. I repeated the phrase "where no man has gone before" The arrogance that is presupposed in my thesis staggered me. Images of Cecil J. Rhodes, King Leopold II, General George Armstrong Custer, and too many others to count here spring to mind.

So I determined that I'd give some time to thinking about respectful ways to engage the heretofore disengaged, the ignored, the misrepresented. And that thinking is what I'd like to share with you today. I've spent a good portion of my adult life (the last thirty years) stewarding a cultural institution and interacting with the dominant culture from a marginalized position. So you'll hear me today speak of myself as sort of an inside-outsider. I hope that by sharing my own trepidation at dealing with cultural nuance, I'll awaken in you a similar feeling that asks you to interrogate what you bring to the encounter.

As we inside the academy, inside the major regional theatre movement, reach out and seek to include the cultural expression that traditionally has not been part of our offerings, in our curricula and our theatrical presentations, we face special challenges. As founder and artistic director of one of the oldest and most influential professional theatrical organizations (in the world, I'm told), whose reason for being is the exploration and distillation of the African-American experience and aesthetic, I believe my experiences may be relevant to the reordering that this conference's title would suggest.

I would caution us to be aware that the information we may be seeking to engage is most likely part of a living culture, part of the ethos of live people whose lives and culture are integral to the understanding of our study or the theatre that we seek to perform or present. I would hope that our interaction would be respectful and mindful that we run the risk of misinterpreting, misrepresenting, of morphing the very thing we seek to investigate. The applied anthropological directive comes to mind: "First, do no harm!"

From my vantage point, an honest appraisal of our past behavior leads me to again propose extreme caution. Most of our expansion, if even tacitly, has as its basic assumption that before our involvement, the examined cultures either have an unappreciated worth, are simple, unadorned, messy, and/or wasteful. This perspective places us in a position of participating in a "discovery" rather than participating in a meeting or an engagement. One position places us in the role of cultural arbiter. The other makes us a guest.

Related articles from newspapers, magazines, journals, and more
RECEPTION TO CELEBRATE NEW BOOK, 'MAPPING NEW JERSEY'; THURS. OCT. 22
News wire article from: US Fed News Service, Including US State News October 21, 2009 700+ words
...reception to celebrate the publication of "Mapping New Jersey: An Evolving Landscape" by...University campus in New Brunswick. "Mapping New Jersey: An Evolving Landscape" editors...which will be sold at a discount. "Mapping New Jersey: An Evolving Landscape" is...
Mapping new features of Milky Way's bulge.
Magazine article from: Science News Cowen, Ron June 2, 1990 700+ words
Mapping new features of Milky Way's bulge With their view already obscured by Earth's atmosphere, astronomers have a tough time peering...
Mapping New Orleans By Sound
Transcript from: NPR Weekend Edition - Sunday LIANE HANSEN July 12, 2009 700+ words
LIANE HANSEN NPR Weekend Edition - Sunday 07-12-2009 Mapping New Orleans By Sound Host: LIANE HANSEN Time 12:00-13:00 PM Play Audio LIANE HANSEN, host: This is WEEKEND EDITION from NPR...
Africa; mapping new boundaries in international law.(Brief article)(Book review)
Magazine article from: Reference & Research Book News May 1, 2009 700+ words
9781841136189 Africa; mapping new boundaries in international law. Ed. by Jeremy I. Levitt. Hart Publishing 2008 339 pages $70.00 Hardcover Studies in international...
Crime Mapping: New Tools for Law Enforcement.(Book review)
Magazine article from: The FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin Shane, Jon M. January 1, 2006 700+ words
Crime Mapping: New Tools for Law Enforcement, Irvin B. Vann and G. David Garson, Peter Lang Publishing Company, New York, New York, 2003...
Else/Where: Mapping--New Cartographies of Networks and Territories.(Brief...
Magazine article from: SciTech Book News September 1, 2006 700+ words
0972969624 Else/where: mapping--new cartographies of networks and territories. Ed. by Janet Abrams and Peter Hall. U. of Minnesota Press 2005 320 pages $49...
Magali Collection: mapping new direction. (dress manufacturer) (company profile)
Magazine article from: WWD Michals, Debra August 1, 1989 700+ words
MAGALI COLLECTION: MAPPING NEW DIRECTION NEW YORK -- The Magali Collection has had it with growing pains. After three years of stumbling around the better...
IMLS reports on 'Charting the Landscape, Mapping New Paths'.(Institute of...
Magazine article from: Computers in Libraries September 1, 2005 700+ words
The Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) released "Charting the Landscape, Mapping New Paths: Museums, Libraries, and K-12 Learning." This report focuses on how museums and libraries work with schools and other...
For more facts and information, see all results

Source: HighBeam Research, Keynote speech from the twenty-eighth mid-America theatre conference,...

©2009 Gale, a part of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
About us | FAQs | Contact us | Privacy policy | Terms and conditions
Other Gale sites: Encyclopedia.com | HighBeam Research | Acquire Content | Books & Authors | Goliath | MovieRetriever | Smart QandA