Preview

Concept: philosophy, religion, culture

Advanced search

Performativity in Estonian Political Theatre of the 2010s

https://doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2022-1-21-138-153

Abstract

The main political theatre of the 2010s in Estonia was Teater NO99 (2005–2019), which created several experimental projects. The performance Tallinn — Our City (2010) was a tour through the Old Town, during which the guide revealed corruption schemes with the real estate in which city government and personally mayor Edgar Savisaar were allegedly involved. The fictitious political movement Unified Estonia with the final performance United Estonia Assembly (2010) existed for 44 days and copied unfair campaigning of parliamentary parties, thereby predicting the rise of hyper-populism in the 2010s. The documentary production Meeting of the Leadership of the Reform Party (2012) was devoted to a real investigation into the suspicious financing of the ruling party. The musical Savisaar (2015), released during the parliamentary elections, foresaw the fall of the chairman of the Estonian Centre Party, Edgar Savisaar, who had held power for too long. At the same time, the performance activated the followers of the politician, which led to the fact that the year of the performance's release marked the highest level of electoral activity. Performances From the Second Glance (2016) and I’d Rather Dance with You (2016) gathered Estonian and Russian-speaking audience in theatre halls to talk about the problems that had accumulated in society. The play Will Be/Won’t Be: Estonia in 100 Years (2018) was based on the surveys of children and students: the younger generation should choose which way of development Estonia would take. By participating in interactive voting, viewers themselves decided what kind of Estonia they wanted to see: multicultural, technological, nationalistic, ecological Estonia. There could be distinguished three strategies of performativity in the political theater of Estonia: 1) role reversal, when the audience becomes participants in the production and realizes themselves as subjects of the political process, and the active political forces (government, party) turn out to be spectators of an unpredictable theatrical action; 2) usage of space outside the theater (city, media, social networks) to signify how public spaces become the stage for real politics; 3) erasing the line between art and reality, when a fictitious process exists along with the real political process and even affects it. 

About the Author

A. V. Volodina
MGIMO University
Russian Federation

Anastasia V. Volodina — PhD in Philology, Senior Lecturer at the Department of North European and Baltic languages

76, Prospect Vernadskogo, Moscow, 119454



References

1. Bishop, C. (2011) Artificial hells: participatory art and the politics of spectatorship. London: Verso.

2. Boldyreva, T. V. (2014) ‘Politicheskiy teatr kak forma kommunikativnogo deystviya v sovremennoy Rossiyskoy deystvitel’nosti [Political theater as a form of communicative action in modern Russian reality]’, in Noveyshaya drama rubezha XX - XXI vekov: problema deystviya [The latest drama at the turn of the 20th-21st centuries: the problem of action]. Samara: Samara State University Publ., pp. 46–55. (In Russian).

3. Boldyreva, T. V. (2016) ‘Russian Political Theatre and Political Drama through the Historical-Literary Works and Theatre Science’, Herald of Chelyabinsk State Pedagogical University, (1), pp. 72–77. (In Russian).

4. Bourriaud, N. (1998) Esthétique relationnelle. Dijon: Presses du réel. (Russ.ed.: (2016) Reljacionnaja jestetika. Postprodukcija. Moscow: Ad Marginem Press.).

5. Fischer-Lichte, E. (2004) Ästhetik des Performativen. Frankfurt am Main: Suhrkamp. (Russ.ed.: (2015) Jestetika performativnosti. Moscow: Kanon+ Publ.).

6. Geertz, C. (1973) The interpretation of cultures. New york: Basic books. (Russ.ed.: (2004) Interpretatsiia kul’tur. Moscow: ROSSPEN Publ.).

7. Lehmann, H.-T. (1999) Postdramatisches Theater. Frankfurt am Main: Verlag der Autoren. (Russ.ed.: (2013) Postdramaticheskij teatr. Moscow: ABCdesign.).

8. Pesti, M. (2018) Eesti teatri 100 aastat. Tallinn: Post factum Publ.

9. Pesti, M. (2020) ‘Theatre NO99’s Savisaar: An Estonian Political Musical for the Twenty-First Century’, in World Political Theatre and Performance. Leiden; Boston: BRILL, pp. 164–180. https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004430990_013

10. Rancière, J. (2008) Le spectateur émancipé. Paris: La Fabrique éditions. (Russ.ed.: (2018) Jemansipirovannyj zritel’. Nizhnij Novgorod: Krasnaya lastochka Publ.).

11. Römer, С. (2015) ‘Teater NO99: crossing the line’, in Not just a mirror : looking for the political theatre of today: Performing Urgency #1. Berlin: Alexander Verlag, pp. 171–175.

12. Tuh, B. (2019) ‘Alternative №99, 2007-2014’, in Romance with the theatre-2: 21st century. Tallinn: Aleksandra Publ., pp. 16–29. (In Russian).

13. Volodina, A. (2019) ‘Russian-Estonian Relations in the Modern Estonian Theatre’, Theatre. Fine Arts. Cinema. Music, (3), pp. 53–70. (In Russian). https://doi.org/10.35852/2588-0144-2019-3-53-70

14. Volodina, A. V. (2018) ‘Russkiy yazyk v sovremennom estonskom teatre [Russian language in the modern Estonian theater]’, in Lingvostranovedeniye: metody analiza, tekhnologiya obucheniya [Linguistic and regional studies: methods of analysis, teaching technology]. Moscow: MGIMO University Publ., pp. 49–63. (In Russian).


Review

For citations:


Volodina A.V. Performativity in Estonian Political Theatre of the 2010s. Concept: philosophy, religion, culture. 2022;6(1):138-153. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.24833/2541-8831-2022-1-21-138-153

Views: 599


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.


ISSN 2541-8831 (Print)
ISSN 2619-0540 (Online)