Abstract
This chapter explores how ecofeminist theory can inform the analysis of postdramatic theatre, focusing on two works by Pina Bausch: Blaubart (1977) and Vollmond (2006). The perspective presented here distinguishes between a critical ecofeminist mode, which exposes the gendered and ecological logics of domination, and a diffractive mode, which foregrounds material entanglement and the ongoing production of difference through which we are always already exposed to a more-than-human world. Drawing on concepts such as estrangement, exposure, and diffraction, the chapter argues that Bausch’s choreographies employ affective and sensory strategies that resist binary thinking and anthropocentrism. As a whole, the chapter shows how performance can participate in ecofeminist politics not by delivering overt messages, but by enacting new forms of relationality, attuning spectators to the porous, more-than-human conditions of embodiment, and opening up imaginaries beyond the logic of environmental mastery.
Original language | English |
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Title of host publication | The Cambridge Companion to Theatre and Ecology |
Editors | Carl Lavery |
Place of Publication | Cambridge |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Publication status | Submitted - 2025 |
Keywords
- ecofeminism
- ecocriticism
- diffraction
- Pina Bausch