A Salivating Monstrous Plant
By (Author) Tanya Thaweeskulchai
Introduction by Sean Pryor
Cordite Publishing Inc.
Cordite Publishing Inc.
15th April 2017
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Plays, playscripts
Paperback
99
Width 150mm, Height 221mm, Spine 10mm
200g
A Salivating Monstrous Plantbegan as an exploration of violence present in the act of speaking, including attempts and refusal to speak. I'm interested in the body's movements and gestures, and the methods by which our voices are included in that mechanism. The question is: how can language and the body interact to extend beyond communication, verbal or otherwise These metaphors are about conveying sensory experience rather than symbolism, and they operate by integrating metaphor with the body be it writingofthe body into metaphor, or embodying the poetics of physical movements. Might the body exist outside of its functionality, removed from practical movements
I used parts of this work to create a performance piece inspired by Butoh, a Japanese expressionist dance that responds to constraints in the movements of other traditional dance forms. Many poems were rewritten to adjust the original performance script. Hopefully, neither body nor language is favoured, and physical experiences are incorporated into textual metaphor. This embodied language can then push against what we perceive as unspeakable, and if that should fail, if speaking appears impossible, perhaps something can still be achieved in the attempts to speak' Tanya Thaweeskulchai
Tanya Thaweeskulchai is a writer and performance artist who is currently completing a PhD in English Literature and Creative Writing at the University of New South Wales.