Performance in a time of terror offers a thought-provoking
investigation of the way performance has given shape and form to wars on
terror past and present, as both a tactic of violence and a strategy of
resistance.
The book focuses on an array of performances created during the 'war on
terror' of the first decade of the twenty-first century. Beginning with
the spate of carefully rehearsed beheadings carried out by Islamic
insurgents in Iraq in 2004, a key proposal is that the radical in
performance can be most clearly identified in acts of violence that have
obliterated life. Here, the reader is also taken back in time to
encounter how performance was employed as part of counterinsurgency
operations during the 'war on terrorism' in Northern Ireland
(1969-1998). Moving on to explore how theatre-makers and performance
activists have used performance to generate habitable worlds for life in
times of crisis, Hughes argues for a re-engagement with the conservative
in the critical project of art-making. As part of this, original
discussions of the resurgence of political theatre on London stages and
the proliferation of performative anti-war activism during the war in
Iraq (2003-2008), are provided. Also documented are an extraordinary
series of theatre productions commissioned by counterterrorism agencies
following the suicide attacks in the UK in 2005.
Performance in a time of terror will appeal to researchers and
students of contemporary theatre and performance, especially those
interested in the politics of performance. It will also be of general
interest to anyone researching wars on terror and terrorism from an
interdisciplinary perspective.