Augusto Boal is an important figure in theatre who will become increasingly relevant as decentralisation of theatre practice becomes standard. His work centres around the concepts outlined in his 1972 book Theatre of the Oppressed in which he puts forward a criticism of theatre as a predominantly bourgeois activity controlled by powerful interests (by which I do not mean the mafia or some othe secret group which pulls the strings of puppets behind the scenes or whatever. I am referring here to the rule of accepted norms, for example whiteness, chauvenism, upper class power etc) and claims that theatre should be harnessed for other purposes, namely the overthrow of the powerful ('Oppressors') by the powerless ('Oppressed').
Boal bases his theatre work on the theoretical platform of Paolo Friere, whos ideas such as Educational Banking are designed to acheive fluency between power structures and are spelled out in his seminal and often referred to book 'Pedagogy of the Oppressed', as well as his life's work which was aimed at mobilising the marginalised elements of South America in order to empower them and, more broadly, to operate against a structure of powerful/powerless that is based on wealth, class, race or other distinctions.
Boal's appropriation of Friere's ideas are half of his work, the other half of his work involves preparing people for what he refers to as an anti-cathartic overthrow of power. In some senses here, Friere is the idealist and Boal the realist. Where Friere's ideas can only exist in paradigm, Boal activates these ideas and in doing so must necessarily extend them into a provokation towards revolutionary action.
But my central problem with Boal is that by opposing the powerful and encouraging the oppressed to act against their oppressors he first of all becomes part of the system (an oppositional or negative that creates the positive) and secondly and more importantly, reinforces the class definitions on which oppression is supposedly based. By saying "You don't need to be oppressed by these people. Rise up and challenge them!" Boal tries to activate his 'spect-actor' to become an aggressive activist with the target of those "in power". The important thing, as always, is what comes after this revolution. You can imagine groups of oppressed overthrowing the system, and then looking around themselves and saying "what now?" and then they make a new system similar to the old one (in some ways this is why Occupy movement was so special, because it did not try to fill in the gap it left with a new system but it was simple attack). In some sense I think these ideas of Friere should remain as just ideas, and in other ways, I think there are different ends to the story which Friere began.
Where Boal unquestionably targets revolution, I think a softer, (more pathetic) but more ethical approach is one that tries to generate humanist art moments of genuine connection. What do I mean by this. Ok - normally you have theatre which says one thing and does a different thing. The typical example is a piece of theatre addressing the topic of Climate Change that in fact emits several tonnes of CO2 into the air from various factors involved in its production, thereby demonstrating the same level of hypocricy as an activist flying to various parts of the world to attend conferences, etc. Leonardo di Caprio was accused of this, Al Gore etc.The opposite is if you were to take the subject of the theatre and feed it back into the means of production, so for example you make a carbon-neutral show about Climate Change, or a protest show about protest. Theatre being an act in practice, these details become important. Yes, here I think Boal encounters a semantic problem. He is asking for one definition, that of oppressor/oppressed to be overthrown, and on the other hand, also asking that they do not themselves become oppressors. This, I claim, is hypocricy.
(From this angle it is also possible to view the collapse of spectator and actor as being one that suggests theatre-makers should 'practice what they preach', and that this is in fact the only way forward for theatre).
So where do we go from here. Having taken down Boal's premise, how might we rebuild it into a frame that suggests different possibilities?
My first claim here is that Friere's central platform can be extended to the statement that all people are oppressed, regardless of class, race, or , through their participation in the system. There is no such thing, I contend, as the oppressed and the oppressors, there are only oppressed which is everyone. In this sense I am siding with Beckett, Orwell or perhaps Joyce. The way this plays out in reality is that through understanding one's own oppression one can better understand the oppression of another and is therefore more likely to act to prevent it. It is the mechanism which is here the target, the structure itself, and not the individual on the other side of it. This, I claim, is what also made Occupy a significant movement, the target was not so much the individual but the definitive structure in which the individual is placed. The catch cry of 'We are the 99%' expresses itself using the capitalists own terms, as a percentage figure, a bottom line.
Another consequence of the expression of all being oppressed (or if you like '100% oppressed') can be found through examination of what would be its logical opposition. 'Freedom' which is perhaps the first choice here is clearly an ideal - because all are oppressed, none can be free. The opposite or negative term for oppression becomes, I claim, namely something more relevant to contemporary existence of media-saturation and image culture - escapism or fantasy. I will discuss this more another time.
I might be accused of turning oppression into a romantic struggle here. Ok, I admit it, it seems a more authentic answer than the creation of these powerful, god-like rulers (the wealthy, the ruling class etc) who are of course also human beings and of course also have their own struggles. Ok, maybe their struggles seem stupid when you compare them to the struggles of someone suffering because they cannot find enough food for their child etc. An escalator not working or Pippa Middleton's new book not selling well may seem completely trivial next to the a child in the Gaza Strip that is fearing the next bomb dropping on his head. But I argue that it is precisely here that humanism plays its greatest connecting role. Linking these struggles together, ok I admit it's not popular, it would be much easier to argue the opposite, but it gives one access to the other. This is where authentic moments of connection exist, and where we might share our struggles through theatre.
The example here may seem stupid, but in some ways this is how theatre operates to build effective community. Maybe Pippa Middleton's suffering is the same as a child in the Gaza Strip. The question is - who are you to say? Making qualatitive judgements about these things from the outside is not possible. What is acceptable is not necessarily what is true and so on. The point is not the validation of one struggle or another, but the sharing of that struggle, and that is where learning can occur.
So what does this mean for theatre. It means that any truly revolutionary theate will have the sharing of oppressive struggle at its centre, and will exclude no-one from this as exclusion is the basis of oppression. It has at its target the learned division between human beings, being the basis of oppression it tries to eradicate this. It will not necessarily provide salvation to oppression but seek to identify its mechanisms and operations, believing in human will to itself step in and intervene once the context is fully revealed.
Finally, it will ask participants to imagine themselves in the three positions of oppression: oppressor, oppressed and witness, in order that they may fully experience not only the oppressive structure itself but their role within it.
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