Our smart, funny, geeky friend Kate M. posted this fantastic post on her personal blog, and we now reproduce it here with her permission.
In addition to being a student at the University of Utah, Kate M. is a bibliophile, backpacker, international volunteer, and full-time adventurer. She firmly believes in the innate goodness of human beings, the power to change the world through art, and the dementor-alleviating properties of chocolate.
I am a geek.
It’s not always apparent in my day-to-day life, but here in my apartment, it’s obvious. I’m writing this while sitting under a Return of the Jedi poster and a Lord of the Rings wall calendar, wearing an Amazing Spider-Man t-shirt and Adventure Time pajama bottoms. My nightstand holds a reading lamp, an anthology edited by George R. R. Martin, and an illustrated Neil Gaiman short story. My many bookshelves are overflowing with classics and fantasy novels and comic books. Mounted on the wall across from me is a quote by the Tenth Doctor.
Wednesday, October 15, 2014
Sunday, October 12, 2014
For and In Behalf Of: The Fall (Part 2)
This is the second part of scene 2 from the performance piece I have written. To start at the beginning, click here. To start at the top of scene 2, click here.
[F exits]
Allan: From all accounts, my grandfather was a great man:
kind, giving, a devoted husband and father, a loyal friend. However, I also
know that my grandfather was very much a man of his time, a man that grew up in
Georgia and northern Florida in the mid-twentieth century. That is basically to
say that he was pretty racist. I don’t really know the extent, but I certainly
remember growing up hearing the terms “nigger-rigged” and the rhyme
“Eeny-Meanie-Miney-Mo” including the hauntingly violent image of “catch[ing] a
nigger by the toe.” And for the most part, there’s a simple narrative you come
to learn in the South—even the arguably pseudo-South of Northern Florida—that
lets you reconcile yourself to this messy racial family history: “they’re from
an earlier generation, they didn’t know better.” But something about that is
not enough; I still struggle with what exactly I am supposed to do with this
strain of mortal imperfection that disrupts the vision of familial sainthood.
To be honest, I much prefer whitewashing the memory of my grandfather’s racist
convictions—it’s just more pleasant to remember the nicer, more uplifting
qualities of the man, of which there were plenty. I mean really, don’t most of
us want in some way to redeem our ancestors or loved ones as we try to make
narratives of their past? How many eulogies tend to erase flaws, errors in the
past, ironically in honor of memory? And I know I am not alone in this. How do
you deal with your progenitors own falls from grace? What’s your story of
Garden when you are a son of Adam or a daughter of Eve? You don’t have to
actually answer; that was pretty rhetorical. We’re not getting that
participatory in the performance today. At least, not yet.
Saturday, October 11, 2014
For and In Behalf Of: The Fall (Part 1)
The following is a continuation of the script I wrote for a performance piece that explores the practice of proxy baptisms for the dead. This is the beginning of the second scene. For Scene 1, click here.
II. The Fall
[With lights out, projection
reads: “The Fall”. Chuck Berry’s “Back in the USA” begins to play. Lights rise
on female figure]
F: As my sister and I drive along the
Trail of Tears, the most happiness I find is when
we're in the car and I can blare the Chuck Berry tape I brought. We drive the
trail where thousands died, and I listen to the music and think what are we
supposed to do with the grisly past? I feel a righteous anger and bitterness
about every historical fact of what the American nation did to the Cherokee.
But, at the same time, I'm an entirely American creature. I'm in love with this
song and the country that gave birth to it.
[MUSIC PLAYING - "BACK IN THE USA" BY CHUCK BERRY]
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