Mele Yamomo 2
Mele Yamomo 2
Mele Yamomo 2
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About
Funded by the Federal Ministry of Education and Research, the International Research Center for Advanced Studies on "Interweaving
Performance Cultures" was set up at the Freie Universität Berlin to investigate those processes in which cultures interweave in performance.
Textures serves as an online publication platform of the Research Center. It brings together contributions by IRC Fellows, guest lecturers and
artists under four broad categories: Patterns – Threads & Knots – Travelogue – Impulses.
AUTHORS
André Lepecki
Andrej Mirčev
Ann-Christine Simke
Antje Paul
Astrid Schenka
Ayat Najafi
Azadeh Sharifi
Balakrishnan Ananthakrishnan
Brian Singleton
Camilla Loeffler Berg
Catherine M. Cole
Chetana Nagavajara
Christel Weiler
Cody Poulton
Daniele Daude
Danny Yung
Daryl Chin
David Moss
David Savran
Daya Bai
Erika Fischer-Lichte
Evelyn Schuler Zea
Fadi Fayad Skeiker
Femi Osofisan
Friederike Felbeck
Gabriele Brandstetter
Gastón A. Alzate
Gavin Krastin
Hanne M. de Bruin
Ho Rui An
Jacqueline Shea Murphy
Jan Creutzenberg
Janez Janša
Johanna Devi
Joy Kristin Kalu
Julia Lemmle
Kai Tuchmann
Kaori Nishio
Katrin Wächter
Kedar A. Kulkarni
Khalid Amine
Klaus Peter Köpping
Kristin Flade
Lucila Piffer
Lydia Haustein
Maleen Sophie Bettels
Matthias Lilienthal
Michael Roes
Nanako Nakajima
Narges Hashempour
Natascha Siouzouli
Navtej Johar
Nele Hertling
Nora Amin
Omar Elerian
Peter Eckersall
Peter Stamer
Pieter Verstraete
Platon Mavromoustakos
Ren Xin Lee
Richard Antrobus
Richard Gough
Rustom Bharucha
Sandrine Micossé-Aikins
Sharon Dodua Otoo
Shen Lin
Sola Adeyemi
Stanca Scholz-Cionca
Stefan Donath
Stephen Barber
Susan Manning
Tara McAllister-Viel
Thilo Grawe
Thomas Lehmen
Thomas Martius
W. B. Worthen
Wichaya Artamat
Yu Wei Jie
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Symposium "Blackface Whiteness and the Power of Definition in Contemporary German Theatre"
Homi K. Bhabha
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Peter Eckersall
Ashkal Alwan
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Matthias Lilienthal
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Interweaving Performance Cultures
ITI – International Theatre Institute
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Ashkal Alwan
In your works as “artist-scholar”, you engage with topics of sonic migrations, queer aesthetics, and post/de-colonial acoustemologies. You are doing both:
you teach as Assistant Professor of Theatre, Performance, and Sound Studies at the University of Amsterdam, and you create performance/theatre and
sound/music. Where does your interest for sound come from?
I did my PhD in the context of the Global Theatre Histories project of professor Christopher Balme at LMU in Munich, Germany. My proposal was about a history of
European opera in Southeast Asia. I collected a lot of archival documents from Southeast Asia. There was so much material that no one has ever written about! However,
when I looked at my dissertation, it felt like what I was doing was simply contributing to this historiography of European opera. It’s as if I was just adding a footnote to this
big history. I realized that this was not what I wanted to do.
In what direction?
This has a lot to do with Spivak’s question: Can the subaltern speak? Sure, there was Aida performed in Manila. But what was the local audience hearing? Where do I find
materials in which they explain about what they heard? These questions illustrate two problems: 1) History often takes the form of a written medium. Histories that are not
written disappear in history; 2) One of the problems is also literacy. Because who can write? And in what language? In Southeast Asia most of the colonized cannot write
in the language of the colonizer. Or in many cases, they cannot write at all. Western epistemology is premised on written knowledge. This is why acoustic epistemology, or
acoustemology, is so important for me; because sound materials are also sources of knowledge. In consequence, I stepped back from music and focused more on sound.
I wrote about these ideas in my book about music and theatre in nineteenth-century Asia Pacific. In Echoing Europe, I reflect further on these topics performatively in
relation to the colonial sound archives.
As an academic you have different ways of working. You collect material, you rearrange it and put it – mostly in a written form – in a new frame. What was your
interest in changing perspective again and negotiating the debate on these topics on stage?
As an academic, I am part of the practice of creating or developing understandings: Epistemologies. And within this world, within the structure of epistemologies – this
knowledge making and knowledge production – I see my job as having to break things apart.
In the way of really deconstructing something that is already there? Or do you mean, also in a way of destroying…
Exactly. To me, science is exactly like this. It’s like looking through a microscope to see the tiny parts. You take them apart, you comment on these parts and describe how
they operate. This is what academics do: idenitify the parts that you do not see. For example, how patriarchy works, because such social structures arrive to us as invisible
systems. We look and analyze microscopically, pointing out what is the problem and then we critique them. That is what I do when wearing my academic hat. But what I
feel is missing in the academic context is something that the arts can do: How to make the parts a whole again. To me, an artist is someone capable of seeing these
disassembled parts and creating a new whole out of them. I do think about arts as a rehearsal for utopia: When science has taken things apart, an artist can recompose a
new utopia.
In your performance Echoing Europe what were the parts you were putting together?
Art has the capacity to make an understanding of the world we live in. We assemble the (fragemented) world in very specific ways. But I’m also reflecting on how art can
be instrumentalized within an agenda. In Echoing Europe, I’m interested in finding this balance. On the one hand, in the performance, I opened up this idea of silence and
speaking as two sides of one whole. How there is violence in this, too. How, for example, certain bodies are allowed to speak and certain bodies are not allowed to speak.
In Echoing Europe, the museum guard characters, both people of color, are tasked with watching over and protecting the displayed museum objects. These recordings are
from a certain culture that were brought to Europe. But who is allowed to speak about them? The people from where these recordings come from are culturally more
connected to these objects, but they are often not allowed to speak about them. In the performance, there is this huge imbalance made noticeable through the physical
absence of the museum director while he is practically simultaneously white- and mansplaining everyone in the museum through his orders, certain hierarchical structures
and ways of displaying the objects. Even in his absence he is so present. And you have the security personnel who may have more connection to these objects, who are
constantly being silenced.
I read in an interview about Echoing Europe with Deutschlandfunk that you said what is defined as music is still decided in the West.4 How did you mean it?
The idea of music is very problematic in how certain musical practices have been defined. I use the term “sound studies” for its more democratizing framework. I find
possibilities in it for a transcendental epistemological approach to auditory cultures. In the same way that performance studies is also re-thinking the idea of theatre. When
I was a student of theatre, we read James Brandon’s The Theatre of South East Asia. In it, he labeled certain performative practices as “proto-dramatic forms”. Such
framework is implicitly stating that drama is the highest form of theatre. This is analogous to calling certain sound practices “noise”. This is even found in academia until
today: you have musicology and you have “ethno-musicology”. If you want to study Bach, Mozart, and Beethoven, you go to musicology. If you want to study everything
else, you study “ethno-musicology”. It is an extremely colonial practice. And these practices are transported to the post-colonial spaces. In the University of the Philippines,
for example, you now have Filipinos studying ethnomusicology who go back to their villages to find case studies for their dissertations. They would ask their uncles and
aunts, what kind of traditional music do you have here? And then their uncles and aunts would say, we don’t have any. And they’ll later hear them singing and be like “yes,
that!” but to them it’s not music. Obviously, music is a very fraught term and you wonder to what extent these aunts and uncles in their villages were thinking that they don’t
call it music because they think of it as something else. Very similar dynamics and power hierarchies operate in today’s music industry working with labels like “world
music”. There is violence in this. In the 19th century in Singapore, for example, the British complained about the ‘noise’ of the Chinese funerals. They are noise to the
British but these are sound practices of another culture. At the core of this problem is in the power relationship of who defines what music is throughout history?
There were very different colonial times. In addition to the Dutch and Spaniards, and later the British, there was also an US-American era. But it was the
European colonizers who were bringing ‘their’ opera to Manila. They were also making sound recordings with the local population that they brought back to
Berlin, where – until today – you can still find the world’s most extensive archives, in which sound recordings were stored as trophies of a colonial sound-
appropriation…
Actually, there are two important archives founded at the end of the 19th century/beginning of the 20th century: The Berliner Phonogramm-Archiv and the Lautarchiv at the
Humboldt Universität Berlin. These two archives have two different intentions and also two different ways of presenting themselves assembling very different kinds of
recordings and sound samples, such as songs, prayers, speeches, folk tales, a linguistic collection etc. Often it is not possible to apply a category.
1. Produced by Kultursprünge at Ballhaus Naunynstraße gemeinnützige GmbH. First production financed with funds from the Land Berlin, Senate
Department for Culture and Europe. [↩]
2. Quote from the program of the performance. See also: http://ballhausnaunynstrasse.de/auffuehrung/66636798. [↩]
3. The photo is a collage by meLê yamomo, based on the original photo: “Bewoners luisteren naar een platenspeler te Batavia” (c.1915, unknown
photographer, from the KITLV collection). Metadata available here: https://digitalcollections.universiteitleiden.nl/view/item/844060 [↩]
4. From a report on Deutschlandfunk, 16.5.2019 by Christoph Möller: https://www.deutschlandfunk.de/sound-performance-echoing-europe-der-
klang-des-kolonialismus.807.de.html?dram:article_id=448881. [↩]
Tags: Echoing Europe, International Research Center, Interweaving Performance Cultures, meLê yamomo, music, Sound, Sound studies, Stefan Donath
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