Affirmative Freakery, Freaky Methodologies: Circus and Its Bodies without Organs in Disability Circus

Authors

  • David Fancy Brock University

Abstract

This paper uses the immanentist philosophy of Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari to explore how a circus and disability project called The Recounting Huronia Cabaret involving intellectually disabled survivors of institutional abuse helped develop what I describe as an “affirmative freakery” in participants. This mode of affirmation of difference provided marginalized bodies with the opportunity to exceed the schematic normative/nonnormative binary in which disabled bodies are often constrained. In the Recounting Huronia Cabaret, the differently virtuosic potentials of the disabled body are explored in juxtaposition to more traditionally normative notions of circus virtuosity. The also paper asks how can we think through and beyond what has come to constitute the relatively impermeable distinction between “(mainstream) circus” and what is often called “social circus”—that “other” of circus (proper) that is understood to engage the social and political more directly than its allegedly more politically disinterested and aesthetically accomplished relation.

Author Biography

David Fancy, Brock University

Dr. David Fancy is associate professor in the Department of Dramatic Arts at Brock University. He is currently publishing on immanence and performance as well as immanence, electromagnetics, performance, and social control.

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Published

2018-03-22

Issue

Section

Is Social Circus the Other of Professional Circus? (Section Editor: David Fancy, Brock University)