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Performance Research
A Journal of the Performing Arts
Volume 22, 2017 - Issue 6: Under the Influence
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ADDICTION, TREATMENT AND RECOVERY

Under the Influence of … Affective Performance

Pages 93-102 | Published online: 27 Feb 2018
 

Abstract

This article aims to explore the complex relationship between applied performance, drugs and addiction. In particular, it attempts to conceive whether participation in applied performance can be addictive. Following up from previous research (Reynolds and Zontou, 2014, Zontou, 2012), it aims to critically interrogate the possibilities and challenges of working with people who have been ‘under the influence’ of alcohol and other drug dependency, the ‘addicts’, and are now in ‘recovery’. It poses the following question: Can applied performance make a positive impact on the participants’ lives? A corollary question: can someone become addicted to applied performance, subsequently what happens when the participants ‘need’ another fix but applied performance is not available? Drawing on addiction studies (Lewis 2015, Seddon 2010) and applied performance (Thompson 2009, Shaughnessy 2013), alongside Braidotti’s (2013) concept of posthuman as an affirmative and political figure; this article will suggest a definition of addiction that helps us move beyond its pathologisation and towards its recognition as an essential ingredient in contemporary cultural production. It suggests that applied performance can offer new ways of understanding the complex subjects that addicts are capable of becoming. In other words, understanding the recovering addict as a posthuman subject affords the addict more agency and autonomy than understanding them as the scapegoated and pathologized subject of contemporary culture. Performance provides addicts with opportunities to engage in an activity that rouses their desire to live, and provides moments of autonomy and personal freedom. These moments are capable of replacing their previous experiences of intoxication with something affirmative. This article, foregrounds Anita Ronell’s statement that ‘there is no culture without drug culture’ (2004: 96) by suggesting that there is no culture without recovering addicts, addicted to affective performance.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

I would like to thank Paul Bayes Kitcher, Phil Ashby and Kirstie Burton for inspiring the arguments presented in this article, and for agreeing to be interviewed. A special thank you to Gary Anderson for his helpful comments, encouragement and for the inspiration of his work, and Claire Morris for her ongoing support.

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