Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield

Revisiting the pointless Falklands war for the stage, over three decades after it took place, was a very timely endeavor for the Argentinean director Lola Arias. By comparison to the larger and more devastating wars of our time, the Falklands conflict was a minor incident in international military h...

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Main Author: Elizabeth Sakellaridou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: IATC 2018-12-01
Series:Critical Stages
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.critical-stages.org/18/conflicting-nations-conversing-individuals/
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author Elizabeth Sakellaridou
author_facet Elizabeth Sakellaridou
author_sort Elizabeth Sakellaridou
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description Revisiting the pointless Falklands war for the stage, over three decades after it took place, was a very timely endeavor for the Argentinean director Lola Arias. By comparison to the larger and more devastating wars of our time, the Falklands conflict was a minor incident in international military history. However, it had a high toll for both nations involved—and all for a futile, absurd cause. By recruiting three Argentinean and three British veterans who actually fought in this war, Arias lets a polyphony of remembered experiences from the conflict rewrite the story from the point of view of individuals who actually confronted each other in the battlefield and had to reconsider afterwards their position vis-à-vis their own nation and government and the rest of humanity. The rehearsal period (longer than the actual duration of the war) and the performance itself brought up a real “minefield” of traumatic memories and repressed emotions which kept reeling and reformulating the stories shared among the veterans and narrated to the audience. Arias combined authenticity with psychoanalytic techniques, devised theatre with personal narrative, digital technology with live music and she trained her recruited war veterans enough to change crude documentary drama into participatory theatre. The paper will make a twofold analysis of the production, on the one hand focusing on the idea of nationhood and identity and on the other hand examining the efficacy of the specific form of verbatim theatre aesthetic employed.
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spelling doaj.art-c1357cf5dad04d8e9f964dab84aeceeb2022-12-22T04:03:30ZengIATCCritical Stages2409-74112018-12-0118Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s MinefieldElizabeth SakellaridouRevisiting the pointless Falklands war for the stage, over three decades after it took place, was a very timely endeavor for the Argentinean director Lola Arias. By comparison to the larger and more devastating wars of our time, the Falklands conflict was a minor incident in international military history. However, it had a high toll for both nations involved—and all for a futile, absurd cause. By recruiting three Argentinean and three British veterans who actually fought in this war, Arias lets a polyphony of remembered experiences from the conflict rewrite the story from the point of view of individuals who actually confronted each other in the battlefield and had to reconsider afterwards their position vis-à-vis their own nation and government and the rest of humanity. The rehearsal period (longer than the actual duration of the war) and the performance itself brought up a real “minefield” of traumatic memories and repressed emotions which kept reeling and reformulating the stories shared among the veterans and narrated to the audience. Arias combined authenticity with psychoanalytic techniques, devised theatre with personal narrative, digital technology with live music and she trained her recruited war veterans enough to change crude documentary drama into participatory theatre. The paper will make a twofold analysis of the production, on the one hand focusing on the idea of nationhood and identity and on the other hand examining the efficacy of the specific form of verbatim theatre aesthetic employed.https://www.critical-stages.org/18/conflicting-nations-conversing-individuals/wartraumaidentityperformanceaffectexperiential theatreevental theatre
spellingShingle Elizabeth Sakellaridou
Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
Critical Stages
war
trauma
identity
performance
affect
experiential theatre
evental theatre
title Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
title_full Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
title_fullStr Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
title_full_unstemmed Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
title_short Conflicting Nations, Conversing Individuals in Lola Arias’s Minefield
title_sort conflicting nations conversing individuals in lola arias s minefield
topic war
trauma
identity
performance
affect
experiential theatre
evental theatre
url https://www.critical-stages.org/18/conflicting-nations-conversing-individuals/
work_keys_str_mv AT elizabethsakellaridou conflictingnationsconversingindividualsinlolaariassminefield