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Seminar

‘Hear the Bones Sing’: Postcolonial Ghost Plays


5 May 2022, 6:00pm - 7:30pm

Online

Event overview

Cost Free / Book here
Department English and Creative Writing, Centre for Comparative Literature, Theatre and Performance
Website Book here
Contact P.Brown(@gold.ac.uk)

‘"Hear the Bones Sing": Postcolonial Ghost Plays'. A Talk by Clare Finburgh-Delijani

The first of three events in the CCL Postcolonial Theatre series, May 2022

Centre for Comparative Literature, Goldsmiths, University of London

What can ghosts teach us about how to live together in postcolonial societies such as the UK or France?

‘[O]ne of my tasks as a playwright is to […] locate the ancestral burial ground, dig for bones, find bones, hear the bones sing, write it down’, explains African American playwright Suzan-Lori Parks (2014).

Clare Finburgh-Delijani's paper examines how a range of playwrights on both sides of the Atlantic are evoking colonial pasts, and their impact on the present, via ghosts.

The performance artist Selina Thompson on her 2018 show salt.: ‘I’m just gonna really sit with all of this pain, all of this trauma, all of this intergenerational baggage, I’m really gonna sit with its global impact, its temporal impact and I’m gonna stay there for a bit.’ (2017).

In this show she explores being haunted by the fact that she is descended from enslaved people.

In Cameroonian-born Léonora Miano’s play, Révélation, staged at the Théâtre de la Colline in Paris in 2018, the afterlife is troubled by Unbuntu, ‘sorrowful souls’.

In both salt. and Révélation the seascape of the Middle Passage becomes a site of memory, where submerged colonial histories resurface, and anti-colonial struggles resist the colonial project.

Finally, Guadeloupian performance artist Stéphanie Melyon-Reinette’s Kepone Dust (2020) brings colonial ghosts into dialogue with their legacy of environmental damage today.

Revenants across these plays return to demand repair for injustices perpetrated in the past.

At the same time, spectres create a doubling, the indeterminacy of which troubles monocultural notions of national identity, instead proposing postcolonial societies as a multi-ethnic and multidenominational.

Attendance is free but booking will be essential to receive a link to attend.

Participants attending:

Professor Clare Finburgh Delijani, Deputy Director of the CCL, is a researcher and teacher in the Department of Theatre and Performance at Goldsmiths University of London.

She has written and edited many books and articles on theatre from France, the French-speaking world and the UK.

Clare’s talk will be chaired by Dr. Mairi Neeves, Lecturer in Postcolonial Literature at Goldsmiths, University of London.

Book here

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Dates & times

Date Time Add to calendar
5 May 2022 6:00pm - 7:30pm
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