Sunday, April 19, 2009

I really enjoyed Della Pollock's "Exceptional Spaces: Essay in Performance and History" on several levels. First, I think the essay modus operandi--its establishment and setting of performance in light of slave auctions--was fascinating. The definition for performance that Pollack borrows from Richard Schechner was particularly interesting to me: "restored behavior" or "twice-behaved behavior." This sense of "re-doing" what has already been done was so brilliantly (albeit sickeningly) tied to Pollack's comparison of slave auctions to brothels and whorehouses which later took over New Orleans. I was most interested in Pollack's description of the triangular enterprise: money, flesh and property, with flesh dominantly displayed in the center. As Pollack says, "the centrality of naked flesh signifies the abundant availability of all commodities: everything can be put up for sale, and everything can be examined and handled even by those who are 'just looking'" (57). A bit later in the essay, Pollack takes this notion of transfer a bit further. Not only could anything by resold and transferred, but in that transfer, anything could be transformed: the protagonist Zoe is resurrected as a white woman, fully transformed and transfigured in her environment. Like a piece of scrap metal put under the flame, the body too can be reshaped and reformed in this spectacle of resale and rebirth.

This objectification of the body--especially female--can be quite clearly linked to the intentions of the brothels and whorehouses; this re-representation of behavior manifested in different environment made me curious regarding the recycling of slavery notions in our present day.

Simultaneously with this essay I was reading David Foster Wallace's "Big Red Sun" in which he explores the inside world of the 1998 Adult Video News Awards (AVNAs), the equivalent of the Oscars in Adult Porn. To rehash the entire essay would just cause me to become emotional and rant: suffice to say that Wallace, if he were in conversation with Pollack, would probably see some parallelisms--especially in light of this triangular exchange--between the slave auctions and later the brothels of New Orleans and the AVNAs in Las Vegas (yes, that's right; the show is hosted every year in Vegas--go figure).

--Julie Lauterbach-Colby

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