Abstract
Theatre is a dangerous witness, challenged with multiple responsibilities of integrity, imagination, inspiration and craft. I explore the relationship between failure, witnessing, and displacement in a class grappling with their own backgrounds, migrations and interrogations of the idea of place and home. We approach performing testimony as an ethical practice in the context of foolish witness, an approach based in neither tragedy nor paralysis, but the impossible bravery and willingness of the clown. The strategy is to unearth the potential in the hysterical, the possibility in the foolish. I describe an exercise in translating and performing testimony and explore how the students navigate the terrain of bearing witness – engaging with class visitors, class readings, creating their own performances, encountering the differences amongst themselves and their own histories – in the context of philosopher Emmanuel Levinas's concern that the problem with tragedy is that it is never tragic enough. Clown and foolishness as an approach provide the opportunity for a performance form where the relationship between suffering and survival might be negotiated.
Notes
1. The term ‘risky stories’ comes from Simon and Armitage-Simon (Citation1995).
2. The idea of ‘re-telling’ began with an exercise in a graduate class I took with Roger Simon.
3. This and further quotes from Deb Filler are from my notes during her visit to my class in October 2007.
4. This next section draws heavily on my essay, ‘Witnessing Subjects: A Fool's Help’ (Salverson Citation2006). For this idea, I thank Rosemary Jolly.