The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com Friday, September 19, 2014 - 7A The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, September19, 2014- 7A RC theater to open Deutches champions experimental format By COSMO PAPPAS DailyArts Writer Theater, like any other artis- tic medium, makes an argument about rep- resentation. RC Deutches On this side of the Theater and Atlantic, a Tanz Tangente naturalis- tic function Open in drama Workshop - the idea Friday September that the- ater repro- 19,8:00 p.m. duces the Keene Theater real world Free by virtue of an illu- sion of stage design, acting meth- ods and other factors - is very often assumed. Even the device of "breaking the fourth wall" takes for granted any "walls" at all. Cer- tain radical traditions in theater have attempted to reinvent theat-, rical practice by challenging these fundamental assumptions. Janet Hegman Shier, the founder and director of the Resi- dential College's German Theater (Deutsches Theater), counts the company as an inheritor of these rebellious traditions. The Deputsch- es Theater, which is entering its 30th year this season, began as a classroomexperience whenShier's students asked to perform a-more "typical" play, and has since grown intoaninstitutionknownfor push- ing the envelope in aesthetic terms, withinthe Universityandbeyond. "In his country there is a ten- dency, at least in theater, to do very representational - for me, very boring - theater, and it's very different in Germany," Shier said. "When you go to see a per- formance in Germany, it's good if you don't understand everything that's going on, and I tell my stu- dents that it doesn't matter what. language it's in.You're going to get so much out of seeing it since it's not so literal" The Deutsches Theater cham- pions the experimentation of the dramatic arts so well known to German audiences and so obscure to most American audiences. Thus, this Friday the doors to the Keene Theater of the Residential College will welcome German-speaking. and non-German-speaking guests alike for an open workshop with Tanz Tangente, a Berlin-based dance company, that specializes in community engagement and working with amateur dance stu- dents. This event concludes the triad of events put on the past couple of weeks by the RC called' "Remem- ber Me," which also included a concert by Professor Michael. Gould,andamultimediaexhibit by Gould, featuring the poetry of RC poetry professorKen Mikolowski. Four dancers from the com- pany and its choreographer, Nadja Raszewski, have been working with the RC's intensive German students in a two-week residency, which culminates on Sept. 19 with the open workshop. There, students will be working with and "translating" into dance and movement a pair of texts by Ulrike Meinhof, German militant and journalist, and Elias Canetti, Bulgarian-born German-language writer. "What we try to do is not to bring out the text in a kind of pan- tomime, not describe what we just read, but to associate by move- ment," Raszewski said. "It means that what you can see as a public,' what you can feel, what you can experience while you see the com- position - you can make up your ownworld. So it's not, 'This is what you should see."' The notion that dance or theater trades in "ideas and associations," according to Raszewski, rather than straightforward images, radi- cally alters the representational possibilities of a performance. This dramatic practice emphasizes more than others the centrality of the body in theater. "For my students, even in Ger- man Theater, we try to get out of the situation where everyone resides 99 percent of the time between here and here (pointing to her head), since it's so impor- tant to involve and understand the body, and ultimately to understand language," Shier said. While it may be beyond the means of most to travel to Berlin for the express purpose of seeing plays, this workshop presents an opportunity for American stu- dents to upset many of the norms and standard practices in theater, internalized by so many, through the expert guidance of Shier and the members of Tanz Tangente. The trouble with Olivia Wilde's breast Have you see have. The past internet has be about Olivia W photo shoot for magazine's September issue, in which she is featured beastfeeding her five month old son Otis. Olivia Wilde: her name will forever be n it? You must few weeks the en buzzing ilde's radical Glamour NATALIE GADBOIS Z Nation' challenges typical zombie tropes synonymous with the word Goddess. Beautiful, talented, funny, smart, formerly married to an Italian prince and currently engaged to an American jester (actor and comedian Jason Sudeikis, for all you celebrity gossip virgins), Wilde is lauded in Hollywood for her grace and easygoing personality. And now this, her public celebration of motherhood, a valid attempt to cast away the mindset that women must be boxed into categories - mother vs. sex symbol, ambitious vs. nurturing - and then shamed when any of these overlap. In some ways this cover is revolutionary, much like when a very pregnant Demi Moore posed nude for Vogue in 1991. Another public disavowal of anyone who subconsciously doubts women's complexity. This is a good thing. I kept repeating that to myself as I read more and more articles with titles like "Wilde stuns while breastfeeding son," and "Olivia Wilde gushes over being a mom!" It's a good thing, right? Giving a woman a spotlight for both her professional and her personal life. Removing the stigma against breastfeeding in public, and baring skin not as an act of sexuality or objectification, but motherhood and serenity. If I could sit there and acknowledge all of these positive things, then why was I inwardly so itchy, more anxious each time I saw that picture? Something was off. I spent the better part of my summer catching up on old "Parenthood" episodes with my family. (I lead a wild life). In an episode in the third season, Kristina Braverman (whose overbearing neediness how far she misses the mark, normally incurs my strongest how unsuccessful she is disdain), is deeply relatable at being a woman. Wilde's as an insecure new mom. photos intone that a real Weeks after giving birth woman can have it all, and to her third child, she has must be it all: successful and to go to her husband's hip nurturing, confident and sexy. recording studio opening in I know what many people the Haight. She reluctantly must be thinking. "It's borrows a dress from her Hollywood, everything is sister-in-law, feeling out unrealistic." "Women can't of her skin and unwieldy. compare themselves to her, At the party, her breasts she's a movie star." And even, begin leaking milk in front "She looks great, you're just of her husband's hot new jealous and won't admit it." assistant, seeping through So I'll admit it: of course the borrowed dress. Kristina I'm jealous. A woman who cries from embarrassment, recently pushed a child from exhaustion, from self- through her vajayjay is now consciousness and feelings of on a magazine cover looking inadequacy. better than I will ever look Nursing Olivia Wilde is - jealousyis only human. not this. While her photo And no, one Glamour photo spread is a step forward does not change the course to re-imagining women of history, nor does it show as multifaceted workers, us anything about the way caregivers, artists and lovers, Wilde actually lives her life. all she serves is to raise She could be just as scared the standards of perfection and insecure and confused once again. ClickHole, a as other new moms. But we subsidiary of The Onion don't get to see that. We that satirizes sites like see perfection,'the way BuzzFeed and Gawker, all women could be if they worded it with blinding tried a little bit harder, if clarity: "Breastfeeding in they lost one more hour of Public Should No Longer be a sleep to work off the baby Taboo For Mothers Who Are weight, if they miraculously Conventionally Attractive." regained their confidence (Shout-out to Erika Harwood, to pose for photos. Because summer Onion intern and Wilde, in both the article current Daily editor, who and the photo, does not set herself apart as a glamorous, Hollywood enigma - no, she is like every new mom! She Standards of loves her baby so much she perfetion ren't breastfeeds him in public and pere are giggles with him at a diner! She is no exception, she is just always helpful. lip r in & W yS e pU . ike yeryone gy gding her. How dh m ake every other ne'w moan eel? By. CATHERINE SULPIZIO Daily Arts Writer When I first started "Z Nation," SyFy's entrance into the "Walking Dead" zombie market, I wasn't sure if I was watching the latest version of some "Halo" game or an actual TV show, Which makes sense, seeing as it is produced by Asy- lum Studios, which is respon- sible for the 'unapologetically campy "Sharknado" franchise. Despite these roots and the low production value, "Z Nation" is not what Susan Sontag joyfully called thing as pure artifice. There is a lot hiding beneath the much-hyped zombie genre. Monster genre seems as if it is constantly fighting an uphill battle with viewers' respect. And for some greater reason, the zombie genre carries more reflexive disdain than the vam- pire or supernatural ones. Why is that? Part of it must be brand- ing, and the vampire genre has managed to subvert audience expectations with shows like "True Blood" which, at least initially, changed the direction from a traditionally singular study to a social allegory. But also, the vampire is a human (a super human, really). Thus, the vampire accepts individuation, its monster-ness not subsum- ing its human-ness. The zom- bie, on the other hand, resists that individuation. Its mind- and therefore its ability for characterization-is destroyed. The fear of the zombie is root- ed in its physical rather than its psychological menace. Thus the zombie mob. While vam- pire genre is man vs. super man, zombie genre is man vs. environment. There must also be teem- ing social forces that are unearthed by various itera- tions of horror. With the vampire genre, we see youth- obsession take an immortal form that would make even the Kardashians jealous; the ugly aspects of eternal beauty sym- bolized by a parasitic depen- dence on other's lifeblood. After all, a beautiful surface lives off the penetrating gaze of the other, if not some shard of that reflected identity. Guy Debord described the recipro- cal nature of havingvs. defining beauty in his essay," Society of the Spectacle." This is also why there are'lmostfne riampire outbreak plots - the vampire A new crop of horror programming. belongs to a dark class of celeb- rity amid an average world. As much as it is feared, the vam- pire is an aspirational figure. On the other hand, the zom- bie genre manifests the deep- set fears of society imploding on itself. It's similar to the primordial chill of books like "Lord of the Flies" and "Heart. of Darkness," except with the added layer of uncanny famil- iarity. In the zombie genre, the zombie mob isn't some unified structure; instead it's a barely contained throng of automa- tons. Three years past the Occupy Wall Street chaos (both inside and out), along with the well-documented low party identification of young people and the surge of breathless coverage following libertari- anism's newfound trendiness, one can read the zombie mob as Baby Boomer's nightmare fantasy of Gen Y-ers. Espe- cially since the narrative of the zombie genre always rests in the perspective of uninfect- ed "sane." Anytime sanity is labeled by perspective of nar- rative, there's an ideological mechanism in place organizing sanity and insanity. In denying the mob perspec- tive (save for exceptions like Isaac Marion's genre-resisting novel "Warm Bodies"), we also miss what could be a vehicle for some fascinating pondering on a wide range of philosophical themes - things like the mind- body connection or the nature of simulacra, at the very least. But I digress, the traditional zombie plot is represented par excellence in "Z Nation," i.e. the plot of survival in a world where reassuring social order has collapsed. Though predict- able, the zombie plot is well equipped to poke at questions of the public sphere, whether it's aware of this fact or not.. For example, in the first scene of "Z Nation," under flickering lights, three convicts are read a hastily-passed order that waives tester consent for test- ing new drugs. It's arguably the most horrifying part of the episode and provides the half- monster, half-human who survives the antidote without turning into a zombie (unlike the two others). He's the unlikely savior of America's future, abandoned by the gov- ernment until his body serves some utility. Deeper analysis of the seem- ingly banal reveals much. Can you watch "Z Nation" for its video-game style gore and bombard of nonstop action? Sure, but it's almost more fun 'to look beneath that and probe at the plight of the Living Dead. didn't write this article but to whom I give credit anyway). Wilde's photo illustrates a modern Madonna - her face calm, her waist already thin, even her breasts sans stretch marks. Her baby is naked and glowing, a paragon of infant innocence and grace. What purpose does this humble-brag serve? What is the cost that one of the few public representations of new motherhood now establishes even more impossible standards for women? Imagine Kristina, exhausted and soft, still trying to regain her dignity after her body has grown and reshaped to accommodate a-whole person, reading that article. Seeing So congrats, Olivia. Seriously, you seem happy and your baby is adorable. You were perfect before, and now your title can 'include "Goddess with Babe in Arms," like a 2nd century Greek statue. Feminism is complicated and often at odds with itself, and navigating a public image as a woman is nearly impossible, so you can't be blamed. Who knows who is to blame. I'll just be on the couch, watching "Parenthood" and eating ice cream from the carton, in solidarity with the Kristinas of the world. Gadbois is eating ice cream out of the carton. To join her, e-mail gadbnat@umich.edu. Merge your science/engineering background with management, leadership ad communication in professional master's programs! 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