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"Is Race a Trope?": Anna Deavere Smith and the Question of RacialPerformativity Debby Thompson is Assistant Professor of English at Colorado State University, where she teach- es classes inModem Drama, Literary Theory, andMulti- cultural Literature. She is currently completing a book entiledCasting Suspicions: Race,Identity and Politics in Contemporary American Theater. Thebook studies thewayscontemporary performances and theater practices both participate in andinterrogate American racial constructons inanera of post-identity politics. s race a trope?" Anna Deavere Smith'sperformances not only ask but embody this question.They also ask another, equally important question:"Whois asking?" Anna Deavere Smith is an AfricanAmerican performance artistknown for her techniqueof interviewingsubjects, particu- larly on mattersof race,and then recreating her subjects' respons- es with a differenceon-stage.She has recentlygained tremendous popularityfor her work Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992,part of her largerproject "Onthe Road: A Search for AmericanCharacter." The question in my title, "IsRacea Trope?", comes, however, not from me or from Anna Deavere Smithper se but from a perfor- mance of Smith'sin which she recreates an interview she con- ducted with academicand critical theoristCarroll Smith- Rosenberg.'Earlyin the development of her techniqueof inter- viewing and then performing people of diverse races,ethnicities, genders, classes, professions,dialects,cadences,personalities, and opinions, Anna Deavere Smithperformed an edited inter- view she'd conductedwith Smith-Rosenberg, who asks and explores the question "Israce a trope?" The answer to this ques- tion for Smith-Rosenberg is complex, and Anna Deavere Smith's performance of Smith-Rosenberg's answer is even more complex. Not only do both social theoristssay that identity, in this case racialidentity, is experiencedas both a fact and as a trope,but Anna Deavere Smith incorporates this post-structuralist model of racialidentity into her acting approach. The question "Israce a trope?" is all the more interesting when it is asked in the context of a black woman (Smith), playing a white woman (Smith- Rosenberg), asking the question of the blackwoman who is now playing her. First, however, to get to the question of race as a trope, and how Anna Deavere Smithhas developed an acting techniquethat can embracethe complexityof this question,I want to move back to the context of current acting practices, and then forwardagain into Anna Deavere Smith'sinterventions into approaches to racial identity and character in theater. W hat I am calling Anna Deavere Smith'spost-structuralist acting practicesarose not out of her engagementwith post-structuralist race theory but out of her frustration with act- ing based in "psychological realism" (Fires xxvi). While post- structuralist models of identity-notions of identity as "performa- tive"-have become almost dogma in current literary theory, act- ing practicein the U.S. has been slow to reflectthis shift in mod- African American Review, Volume 37, Number 1 0 2003 Debby Thompson hmo

Thompson, Deborah - Is Race a Trope

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"Is Race a Trope?": Anna Deavere Smith and the Question of Racial Performativity

Debby Thompson is Assistant Professor of English at Colorado State University, where she teach- es classes in Modem Drama, Literary Theory, and Multi- cultural Literature. She is currently completing a book entiled Casting Suspicions: Race, Identity and Politics in Contemporary American Theater. The book studies the ways contemporary performances and theater practices both participate in and interrogate American racial constructons in an era of post-identity politics.

s race a trope?" Anna Deavere Smith's performances not only ask but embody this question. They also ask another,

equally important question: "Who is asking?" Anna Deavere Smith is an African American performance

artist known for her technique of interviewing subjects, particu- larly on matters of race, and then recreating her subjects' respons- es with a difference on-stage. She has recently gained tremendous popularity for her work Twilight: Los Angeles, 1992, part of her larger project "On the Road: A Search for American Character." The question in my title, "Is Race a Trope?", comes, however, not from me or from Anna Deavere Smith per se but from a perfor- mance of Smith's in which she recreates an interview she con- ducted with academic and critical theorist Carroll Smith- Rosenberg.' Early in the development of her technique of inter- viewing and then performing people of diverse races, ethnicities, genders, classes, professions, dialects, cadences, personalities, and opinions, Anna Deavere Smith performed an edited inter- view she'd conducted with Smith-Rosenberg, who asks and explores the question "Is race a trope?" The answer to this ques- tion for Smith-Rosenberg is complex, and Anna Deavere Smith's performance of Smith-Rosenberg's answer is even more complex. Not only do both social theorists say that identity, in this case racial identity, is experienced as both a fact and as a trope, but Anna Deavere Smith incorporates this post-structuralist model of racial identity into her acting approach. The question "Is race a trope?" is all the more interesting when it is asked in the context of a black woman (Smith), playing a white woman (Smith- Rosenberg), asking the question of the black woman who is now playing her.

First, however, to get to the question of race as a trope, and how Anna Deavere Smith has developed an acting technique that can embrace the complexity of this question, I want to move back to the context of current acting practices, and then forward again into Anna Deavere Smith's interventions into approaches to racial identity and character in theater.

W hat I am calling Anna Deavere Smith's post-structuralist acting practices arose not out of her engagement with

post-structuralist race theory but out of her frustration with act- ing based in "psychological realism" (Fires xxvi). While post- structuralist models of identity-notions of identity as "performa- tive" -have become almost dogma in current literary theory, act- ing practice in the U.S. has been slow to reflect this shift in mod-

African American Review, Volume 37, Number 1 0 2003 Debby Thompson hmo

Page 2: Thompson, Deborah - Is Race a Trope

els of identity, and is still very much based in liberal humanism. Although anti-Naturalistic traditions, which have been quite strong in European drama, have always had a presence in American drama (in forms such as expressionism, surrealism, even camp and neo-melodrama), the preponder- ant mode has remained firmly a Naturalistic one.

There have, of course, been many notable exceptions to Naturalistic the- ater in the U.S. Some prominent ones include The Living Theatre of Judith Malina and Julian Beck, the work of Joseph Chaikin and Roberta Sklar and the Open Theatre, El Teatro Campesino's Boal-influenced people's theatre, Richard Schechner's Environmental Theatre approaches, the Wooster Group, the campy, postmod- ern productions of Charles Ludlam's Ridiculous Theater and of the WOW Cafe, and many other experimental and avant-garde theaters.2 The most immediate precursor to Anna Deavere Smith's work is that of Adrienne Kennedy, whose 1964 Funnyhouse of a Negro takes a highly post-structuralist, anti-Naturalistic approach to character and identity,3 and whose A Movie Star Has To Star in Black and White, which Smith directed in 1980, Smith credits as the beginning of her non-Naturalistic approach to personae and psychic life (Tate 198). Interestingly, the European anti-Naturalistic form that is most clearly a precursor to post-structuralist theater-Brechtian alienation and Epic Theater-has had very little presence in American drama, and particularly in mainstream (Broadway and off- Broadway) theater, as can be seen in actors' training approaches.

The preponderant philosophy underlying acting approaches taught in the U.S. remains one of liberal human- ism. The majority of actors' training programs in North America continue to operate in variations of the Stanislavsky approach (or its American incarnation, Method Acting), which views human nature as transcultural and transhistorical, and views a charac-

ter's identity as having an essential core of interior objectives and the char- acter's (or actor's) bodily acts as the outward manifestations of the charac- ter's interior identity. The "Naturalistic" Acting Approach varies from the versions of Stanislavsky him- self to those of, for example, Uta Hagen, Sanford Meisner, Eric Morris, and William H. Macy and David Mamet. As different as these various commonly taught approaches seem to be, all believe that human nature is universal, and that the essence of act- ing is to uncover the human spirit, to bring out the universal in the specifics of human life. For example, the Practical Handbookfor the Actor states that "the world needs theatre and the theatre needs actors who will bring the truth of the human soul to the stage" (Bruder et al. 7), and Hagen states that "internal" (or Naturalistic) acting "can become as timeless as human experi- ence itself" (13).

Because of the belief that all human beings share a common nature or soul, and that this commonality matters more than individual differences, actor and character can and should, in Naturalistic acting, connect through a shared human nature. Hence distinc- tions between the actor and the charac- ter, in Naturalistic acting, should dis- appear for the audience and become minimized (to varying degrees) for the actor. All of these differing Naturalistic acting approaches posit an "inner core" or "truth" or "essence" to a character, which houses a "through-line" or "super-objective" and other subsidiary "objectives." Furthermore, though these approaches differ on the degree to which the actor should "become" or "be" the character he/she is playing, all agree that the character is built up from the "instincts," "impulses," "common sense," and "truth" of the actor. Mamet says that "your greatest gift as an artist [is] your sense of truth" (Bruder et al. x) and that, as an actor, you must "fol- low the truth you feel in yourself" and "follow your common sense" (xi). Uta Hagen stipulates that "your own iden-

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tity and self-knowledge are the main sources for any character you may play. Most human emotions have been experienced by each of us by the time we are eighteen, just as they have been by all human beings throughout the ages" (29). She continues: "Once we are on the track of self-discovery in terms of an enlargement of our sense of iden- tity, and we now try to apply this knowledge to an identification with the character in the play, we must make this transference, this finding of the character within ourselves, through a continuing and overlapping series of substitutions from our own experi- ences and remembrances, through the use of imaginative extension of reali- ties, and put them in the place of the fiction in the play" (34). Sanford Meisner likewise observes that he is "a very nonintellectual teacher of acting. My approach is based on bringing the actor back to his emotional impulses and to acting that is firmly rooted in the instinctive. It is based on the fact that all good acting comes from the heart, as it were, and that there's no mentality in it. (37) For Eric Morris, "The actor's fundamental question is: 'What is the reality and how can I make it real to me?' In this kind of training the actor discovers himself fully both on stage and off . . ." (1). Ac several of these quotes suggest, there is a strong strain of anti-intellectualism in most North American acting approach- es, which, as I will show, Anna Deavere Smith's work counters.

An actor, in the Naturalistic approach, identifies with her character and her character's emotions by recall- ing her own reserves of emotionally rich and emotion-triggering memories (Hagen) or by imagining him- or herself in given circumstances (Meisner). Uta Hagen offers the example of an actor playing Desdemona in the murder scene:

. .. I should see that I want to cope with a foreboding of an unspecified disaster. I want to rid myself of a sense of mounting terror. As illogical as it may sound, I can use an experience of waiting in a hospital room prior to

surgery, even a dentist's office prior to a tooth extraction. The fears that rush in on me are larger and less static than some fictional, preconceived fear for a Desdemona. (40)

Or, if the action is "making a friend take the plunge," the actor may use "it's as if I'm making my sister Mary go back to college" (Bruder et al. 79). The fear or pleading on-stage, then, will not be "manufactured" (or "indi- cated") but "real." Hence, in the Naturalistic approach, "acting is being."

One problem with this kind of striving for authenticity in perfor- mance is that it is based in the actor's self; it is "self-oriented." Because the characters represented must remain within the emotional and experiential range of the actor, the range of identi- ties and emotions possible for the char- acter are constrained by the much more limited range of identities and emotions actually experienced and already known or at least imaginable (through the "magic if" or "as-if") by the actor. Furthermore, fundamental to a post-structuralist critique of liberal humanist models of identity is the belief that ideology and ideological state apparati (including the arts) cre- ate "common sense" or "obviousness" or "believability." Ideological state apparati make us experience ideologi- cal structures as deeply personal, nat- ural, and instinctive. The way the actor's emotions and identities are experienced, then, will (in a post-struc- turalist model) be very much embed- ded in the ideological situations of the actors, but will be presented as "impul- sive," "instinctive," "natural," "the truth of human nature." Naturalism, in other words, naturalizes ideology.

This "naturalistic" approach to act- ing in North America is, I suggest, one of an array of reasons that the institu- tion of theater, although full of left- leaning, politically radical people, remains for the most part extremely conservative in its envisioning of racial, ethnic, gender, and sexual realities -

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and more importantly of potential reali- ties not yet created.

Smith, by contrast, is determined to encourage "other-oriented" rather than "self-based" approaches to acting (Fires xxvii). Instead of "finding the character within ourselves" (as Uta Hagen puts it), actors should look for the character outside of themselves. Instead of building a character from the inside out, actors should build the character from the out- side in. While "a basic tenet of psychological realism is that charac- ters live inside of you and that you create a character through a process of realizing your own similarity to the character," Smith is developing "a technique that would begin with the other and come to the self" (Fires xxvi-xxvii). In Smith's acting approach, the distinction between actor and character remains decisively intact. Smith says that, in performance, she's "there intellectually and never go[es] away intellectually. Some actors would say you should go away intellectually, but I'm always there" (Tate 201). The goal of perfor- mance becomes, then, not authenticity but exploration of the gap between self and other, actor and character, as well as of the gaps within our seemingly linear ideological narratives.

Of her experience directing Kennedy's Movie Star, Smith says:

. . . it was white actors having to do this black stuff and still be Bette Davis. So then I just began to tear apart in my own thinking all the things that build personae and psychic life. Which I had never really believed in anyway. I sorta disliked the traditional way I had been taught that everything comes from inside. That for me to be any character it has to come from me, Anna, and my life.... So I had this opportunity to take apart that thing and not assume anymore that this [pointing to her gut] had a direct line to this [pointing to her head]. (Tate 198)

Here Smith's approach to character resembles a Brechtian and incipiently post-structuralist mode. In Brechtian theater, the actor must never "go so far as to be wholly transformed into the character played.... [The actor's] feel- ings must not at bottom be those of the character, so that the audience's may

not at bottom be those of the character either" (Brecht 193-94). This detachment of actor from character is impor- tant to Brechtian acting because Brecht, like most Marxists and post- Marxists, believed that "human nature" is not universal or transhistori- cal, but is historically specific and socially con-

structed. Theater should, then, take an historical approach to character and to the human condition, even in its por- trayal of the present. Rather than natu- ralizing a character's conduct, Brechtian theater "leads real conduct to acquire an element of 'unnaturalness,' thus allowing the real motive forces to be shorn of their naturalness and become capable of manipulation" (Brecht 191). Such a theatrical process constitutes Brecht's famous "Alienation Effect": "A representation that alienates is one which allows us to recognize its subject, but at the same time makes it seem unfamiliar.... The new alienations are only designed to free socially-conditioned phenomena from the stamp of familiarity which protects them against our grasp today' (192). Theatrical alienation "treats social situations as processes, and traces out all their inconsistencies" (193), and inconsistencies in individual and cultural identities present sites for denaturalization, intervention, and change. Hence "contradictions are our hope!" (Brecht 47).

A brief example of Smith's Brechtian techniques can help illustrate her difference from Naturalist theater and humanist philosophy. In the "Seven Verses" piece in Fires, Smith

By approaching racial identity as

performative, Anna Deavere Smith can question the fact of

race without discounting racism's

very real effects.

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performs the Minister Conrad Mohammed being interviewed by her- self. What gets emphasized in this piece, particularly in its performance, is not how Conrad Mohammed can be seen as a local and specific example of the universal human struggle for iden- tity and for justice, but how Mohammed is a subject of a complex and conflicted historical moment which marks him with its contradic- tions. Indeed, even as Mohammed argues for a pan-African (or at least Afrocentric) cultural identity, the per- formance suggests the opposite. Mohammed contrasts "the total subju- gation of the Black man" with other forms of physical suffering:

You can go into Bangladesh today, Calcutta, (He strikes the table with a sugar packet

three orfour times) New Delhi, Nigeria, Some really So-called underdeveloped nation, And I don't care how low that person's

humanity is (He opens the sugar packet) whether they never had running water, if they'd never seen a television or any-

thing. They are in better condition than the

Black man and woman In America today Right now. Even at Harvard. They have a contextual understanding

of what identity is. (He strikes the table with another sugar

packet three orfour times and opens it.) But the Black man has no knowledge

of that; He's an amnesia victim. (Starts stirring his coffee) He has lost knowledge of himself (Stirring his coffee) and he's living a beast life. (Stirring his coffee) So this proves that it was the greatest

crime. Because we were cut off from our past.

(Fires 55-56)4

Smith emphasizes, even alienates, Mohammed's consumption of sugar and beverage-which in performance could read as coffee or tea. His/her aggressive stirring and striking of

sugar packets constitutes a Brechtian "social gest." Coffee, tea, and sugar were not only goods whose production historically depended on slavery, but they continue to be goods produced (predominantly) by people of color under slave-like conditions. Mohammed unwittingly participates in the very condition he condemns, even as he condemns it. But Smith's perfor- mance does not suggest hypocrisy on Mohammed's part; rather, it illustrates the complexity of our historical moment, in which oppression of peo- ple of color is so global and so natural- ized that we can't see it unless it is aggressively alienated for us. Indeed, it may be impossible, particularly for people of color in our current post- modern, multinational-corporation-dri- ven, systemically racist but allegedly equal American culture, to speak and act with a unitary voice and a solid and consistent core.

Related to the notion of a solid and consistent core is humanistic or "Naturalistic" acting's model of identi- ty as "deep," not superficial. The Naturalistic mantra that "acting is being" is rooted in the liberal humanist belief in a true, core self, from which all doing and perceiving springs. Morris states that you can't "teach a person to act if he isn't connected to his inner self" (2). Sensory choices (or sense memories) become more true and real when they "touch the nucleus of the individual self" (3). True Being is prior to acting. The individual self antedates, in this model, all senses and actions that it experiences. In other words, identity in the humanist model is something you have; what you do is always a secondary reflection of a pre- existing, interior identity. The Macy/Mamet method would, at first glance, seem to be the exception to this model, for this approach accords with Aristotle's notion that dramatic "char- acter" is defined as "the sum total of an individual's actions" (74). "To act means to do," it posits, "so you must always have something specific to do onstage or you will immediately stop

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acting" (Bruder et al. 13). But even with this approach's insistence that acting is doing, and that character is action, it posits a prior self-hood to the actor's actions:

The reason great actors are so com- pelling is that they have the courage to bring their personalities to bear on everything they do. Don't ever play a part as someone else would play it. Remember that it is you onstage, not some mythical being called the charac- ter. For your purposes, the character exists on the printed page for analysis only.... You have the right and the responsibility to bring to the stage who you are. Your humanity is an absolute- ly vital contribution to any play you act in. (75)

The actor, then, has an identity, even as he/she does a character. Furthermore, there is a radical distinction in this Naturalistic acting approach between the way characters are created and the way our own human identities are cre- ated.

Brechtian, post-Marxist, and post- structuralist models of identity would posit just the opposite. In the work of Judith Butler, for example (an example which can well serve as a synecdoche for a whole body of work on post- structuralist models of identity), identi- ties are radically theatrical and perfor- mative, constituted by repeated poses, postures, acts, and gestures.5 For Butler, "theatricality" is a phenomenon of daily life and is indeed the phenom- enon by which "exteriority" becomes "interior" identity. Butler's work focus- es on gender identity in particular, but could apply, with modifications, to racial, ethnic, sexual, and other identi- ties as well. Butler asserts that a gender is by no means a transcultural or tran- shistorical identity, or even an identity stable within a given culture, climate, or body; it is, rather, "an identity tenu- ously constituted in time-an identity instituted through a stylized repetition of acts" ("Performative" 519). Through repetition, the performances of gender and other identities are legitimated, much like in ritual social drama.6 The gendered acts that one performs are

not self-generated (indeed, the acts generate the "self"). The ideal of an innate, coherent identity, indeed, is an effect of performance which erases its own performativity: "Gender reality is performative which means ... that it is real only to the extent that it is per- formed" ("Performative" 527). In other words, gender identity-or any other kind of identity-is not something that you have, but something that you do- or, at least, something that you have //only" by doing it again and again and again.

And this notion that identity -in our case, racial and ethnic identity-is not something there, but something constantly made and remade, holds out the potential for change. When an assigned identity is not re-cited and re- performed perfectly, then that identity can shift. Resistant or subversive per- formative repetitions, always done, of course, under surveillance and the threat of potentially severe punish- ment, are nevertheless possible. The subject produced through performative reiteration of norms can also somewhat re-perform those norms with a differ- ence, and even, potentially, constitute performative identities not yet normal- ized or even scripted or embodied.

For Anna Deavere Smith, racial identity is radically performative, so what interests her as an actor is a per- son's struggle within and against scripts. When interviewing subjects to represent as characters, she tries "to create an atmosphere in which the interviewee would experience his/her own authorship" (Fires xxxi). Character, or identity, lies not in a pre- existing essence but in the process of self-authorship:

... everyone, in a given amount of time, will say something that is like poetry. The process of getting to that poetic moment is where "character" lives.... The pursuit is frequently filled with uhs and ums and, in fact, the wrong words, if any words at all, and almost always what would be con- sidered "bad grammar." I suppose much of communication could be nar- rowed down to "the point." This pro- ject is not about a point, it is about a

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route. It is on the road. Character lives in the linguistic road as well as the destination. (Fires xxxi-xxxii)

Smith believes that American char- acter "lives not in what has been fully articulated, but in what is in the process of being articulated, not in the smooth-sounding words, but in the very moment that the smooth-sound- ing words fail us" (Fires xli). That is, character is alive in those moments of performance with a difference, in which scripts and performative acts are in the process of shifting, if ever so slightly. So Smith is interested not in what is consistent about a subject, but in what is radically inconsistent. She focuses in on the internal contradic- tions in characters, on the evidence of "fault lines."

In pursuing the relationship between language and character, Smith started with a statement made by her grandfather. During her days of classi- cal actor training, she remembered her grandfather's statement as "If you say a word often enough it becomes your own" (Fires xxiii). Later, she learned that her grandfather's statement actual- ly was "If you say a word often enough it becomes you." This difference- between words becoming your own and words becoming you -is the dif- ference between humanist and post- structuralist models of acting and, indeed, of selfhood. If words become your own, there is a "you" pre-existing the words; but if words become "you," then your "you-ness," your very self- hood, is made up of your interaction with words. Or, turned around, you become you by saying words. Identity isn't "there"; it's "always being negoti- ated" (Fires xxxiii).

Subsequent to this realization, Smith moved her acting approach from individual to communal or social lev- els. To explore community identities, she went to communities in crisis, most notably Crown Heights (New York) and Los Angeles, just after a major, racially inflected uprising in each city. In Smith's interviews with members of these post-uprising communities, while

one character might assert his or her "true" racial identity, other characters radically question the "truth" of identi- ty categories, particularly based on race. While some individual characters may try to fit their senses of self-identi- ty (particularly racial/ethnic identity) into essentialist models, the very for- mat of the performance pieces itself resists such models-an African American woman playing African American men, Hasidic Jewish men and women, a Korean grocer, Jamaican immigrants, hip hop artists, and many other identities quite different from her own. If Brecht implicitly, and Judith Butler explicitly, argues that identities are not fixed things that you have, but things that you do, Anna Deavere Smith's acting approach incarnates this model by making identities not nouns but verbs, actions, self-activations.

A nother way of saying that racial identity, for Anna Deavere

Smith, is radically performative would be to say that race is a trope. And this idea is precisely what one of her inter- viewees, Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, sug- gests:

In other words, It's people who are trying to address

the old Marxist paradigm of infrastructure being the real stuff and superstructure being things like

language and literature, and saying, uh but wait a second, language is tied in with that. How do you define sexuality? How do you find-how do you define

race? And gender and race become then I

think emblematic of this. How do you think of this? Is race a trope? Uh, to what extent is it real? Um, if you're saying, that it's a social

construction and therefore a trope, do you lose some of your political uh

uh uh uh uh talk? Uh uh uh so uh how do you hang

on-because if if's if if's a construction and and and and and then it's not real,

then it's just a fantasy. So how can you hang onto the concept

of a social construction

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and still maintain the reality of gender and race as political uh uh uh forces.

And so these would be some of the ways in which uh which some of the ways

that which which could then be more generally stated as

what is the relationship between lan- guage and and and power.

And we would be saying we would be saying [sips drink]

that there is a hegemonical discourse which very few people mostly white males construct.

And there are a variety of other social dialects

and you can in fact speak more than one dialect at the same time.

We in academia have to speak the hegemonical discourse in order to survive.

How does this affect us? How does this affect

the discourses themselves? How can we in fact corrupt and co-opt

the eh corrupt uh how in fact does the hegemonical dis-

course in fact corrupt and co-opt us? These would some of uh be some of

the issues that we are very very concerned about-

How this eh works in our lives. ("Identities")

I take it that the "it" of the second line is a field of scholarship applying post- Marxist and post-structuralist approaches to racial, gender, and sexu- al identity. Carroll Smith-Rosenberg seems to be explaining to Anna Deavere Smith how post-structuralist theory applies to our understanding of everyday performances of race and gender. Many of Anna Deavere Smith's interview-based performance pieces follow this pattern: They begin by inhabiting and poking gentle fun at the discourse the subject is occupying, then find the moments in which the subject struggles within and against this dis- course, and then come to a moment where the subject-discourse interaction reaches "poetry."7 That is certainly the pattern in this piece.

Smith-Rosenberg's language falters a bit when she asks, "How do you find-how do you define race?" While she intends to ask, "How do you define race," she initially utters the word find. Though Smith-Rosenberg corrects her-

self, Anna Deavere Smith's perfor- mance of Smith-Rosenberg preserves the tension between race as something to "find and face" and as something to "define"-a tension reflecting the con- flicting models of race as something already there, waiting to be uncovered, and race as something to be construct- ed. This "slip of the tongue" is not a Freudian slip; it does not reveal the repressed, unconscious material of the individual character's unique, "true self." If Smith-Rosenberg's "slip" reveals an unconscious at all, it is a political unconscious. Her tongue hits on anxieties and contradictions in American culture's search for racial identity.

Some of Smith-Rosenberg's strug- gles with language are outright funny. For instance, her struggle to find the word talk, when asking, "If you're say- ing, that it's a social construction and therefore a trope, / do you lose some of your political uh uh uh uh uh talk?" unwittingly and amusingly embodies its point. But the question, and the struggle for language embedded with- in it, embodies a very serious question. Likewise, while it is very funny that Smith-Rosenberg, like me, speaks a very dense, multi-syllabic, academic discourse under the name of speaking of and for the people and daily life, she also has profound moments of absolute clarity. "Is race a trope?"-a question enabled by (and perhaps only formu- latable in) post-structu'ralist academic- speak, but all in monosyllables-gets at, I think, a fundamental question of our time. What does it mean to say that race is-or isn't-real? What's at stake with this claim? Who is empowered by it, and under what conditions?

Anna Deavere Smith, in her perfor- mance of Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, embodies Smith-Rosenberg's question. This is not "color-blind casting." Anna Deavere Smith does not wear make-up or manipulate lighting to appear to be the white woman she is portraying. In fact, Smith accentuates the differ- ence-racial and other-between her- self and her subjects. That a black

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woman is playing a white woman is part of the meaning of the piece. Unlike Naturalistic acting, in which Anna Deavere Smith would "become" Carroll Smith-Rosenberg, and unlike the philosophy of color-blind casting, in which the race of the actor has no bearing on the race or meaning of the character, here Anna Deavere Smith's self-conscious and self-reflexive por- trayal of Carroll Smith-Rosenberg embodies the questions being dis- cussed: Is race innate? a mere act? a social construct? a lived reality? Can race be transgressed? transcended? reproduced? There's a crucial tension here: On the one hand, Anna Deavere Smith can clearly perform, recreate, embody, inhabit, "become" another race. On the other hand, she is just as clearly an African American woman playing a white woman-and even if we "blind" ourselves to her "color," we are recreating her race by the very act of consciously and conscientiously blinding ourselves to it. It is this ten- sion that Smith-Rosenberg explains and Anna Deavere Smith embodies simultaneously.

Many people, and particularly white, middle-class liberal humanists, want passionately to believe in and practice color-blind casting both on- stage and in daily life. They want to believe that race is a "mere" construct, and if we stop reconstructing it, it will go away. That, for them, is a good thing, for if race is only a matter of individual identity, then it is not a sys- temic problem. And, of course, at this point in U.S. history, white people-and white supremacy-have more to gain by ignoring race than by seeing it. Ignoring race enables white folks to escape the label "prejudiced" and, at the same time, avoid dealing with the very real problem of systemic racism in the American economy. Thus, liberal humanists often hear in Smith-Rosenberg's piece that race is not real-it's a trap-and are puzzled by what they see as the "reverse racism" of African Americans who insist on their own black identity. In the same "On the Road" project in

which Anna Deavere Smith performs Carroll Smith-Rosenberg's "Is Race a Trope?", she also performs the African American playwright and director George C. Wolfe, author of The Colored Museum and director of Smith's own work. And her Wolfe emphatically rejects the notion that race is a trope that mutually constructs notions of "blackness" and "whiteness":

I am not going to place myself in relationship to your whiteness. We can talk about your whiteness if

you want to talk about that. But my blackness does not

resis-ex-re-- exist in relationship to your whiteness. It is not in relationship to- it exists. It exists. And like I said, I come from a very

complex, confused, neu-rotic, sometimes self-destructive reality, but it is a reality complete unto itself. And then you're white. And uh like I said uh I am not gonna defend the the the the the uh uh define uh my blackness according to your whiteness because my blackness is once again it is a it is it is complex, uh demonic, it's ridiculous, it's absurd, it's all the stuff. And that's what I found so fascinating

about people's reaction to Colored Museum.

Because how could I say these things about black people and not be uh be saying

white is better? ... And that's what I found real real real

real real real real fascinating. And what that told me was the shit

that they were accusing me of is alive and well and blooming and they water it and tend to it daily

with their own shit. And they do not want to set uh accept

responsibility for it so once again they put the responsibility back on me. Because uh by confronting their own

stuff, it makes them feel small. But, I mean, I have major demons, but

that is none of the- that that this uh nah that eh nah nah Black il where my extraordinariness is.

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And that is what I found so extraordi- narily

confusing.

Wolfe's tongue, too, has trouble articulating the word define, but instead of confusing it withfind, he confuses it with defend. For Smith-Rosenberg, find- ing race and defining race form a dialec- tal and confusing relationship. For Wolfe, defining blackness and defending blackness are both synonymous and distinctly different activities. Similarly, when Smith represents Wolfe attempt- ing to assert that his blackness exists independently of whiteness, she shows his tongue offering resist for exist. Racial identity, in Smith's piece, is much more of an embattled site of defense and resistance for the black theatre artist than it is for the white academic. With whiteness looming in Wolfe's thoughts and later in his sen- tence, resistance comes simultaneous with-or rather prior to-existence. Even as Wolfe asserts the lack of rela- tionship between black identity and whiteness, Smith's performance of Wolfe's assertion also suggests the opposite. Wolfe's "slip," revealing the performative resistance of black identi- ty to whiteness, prior to the assertion of blackness's independent existence, seemingly contradicts Wolfe's power- ful statement, but without taking away the power of that statement. Again, this "slip" reveals not the individual anxieties of Wolfe's true but uncon- scious self; rather, it reveals cultural struggles and contradiction around the status and experiences of race in America.

Even more fundamentally, black- ness, for Wolfe, is not merely a trope: black is. Amidst all the confusion about racial discourse, both in Wolfe's mono- logue and around him-amidst all the slips of the tongue, the uhs, the ums, the "that that this uh nah that eh nah nah"-one statement is profoundly clear: "Black is." (In the transcription on paper, the line is a sentence: "Black is where my extraordinariness is." But in performance, Smith delivers the line with tremendous emphasis on the

word is, and with a significant pause after the is, so that "Black is" becomes its own emphatic, self-contained sen- tence.) And a very essentialist state- ment it is. Is George C. Wolfe less sophisticated in his post-structuralist theory than Carroll Smith-Rosenberg is? One look at his play The Colored Museum-beyond the scope of this cur- rent paper-would suggest otherwise. Rather, I would argue that, at the very same moment when it is politically progressive for a white woman to con- sider that race may be a trope, it is politically progressive for a black man to argue that "Black is." That is, the important socio-cultural work of our current political moment is to histori- cize, to de-mystify whiteness-to see whiteness as trope and construct-and at the same time to insist on the very real ways in which racial identity has congealed under conditions of oppres- sion. While oppressed communities need to unite in pride, pride in the very identity formed within conditions of oppression, privileged communities need to understand, first, that they are indeed privileged and, second, privi- leged through a system of racism that should no longer be ignored. For whites in America, in other words, one of the greatest parts of white privilege is not having to recognize white privi- lege as white privilege. Whites have the luxury of denying that race is, whether ontologically grounded or not. Smith's acting approach embraces both sides of this double bind: She brings out of George C. Wolfe's interview two simultaneous views: That racial identi- fy is plural, confusing, absurd, self-con- tradictory, and that racial identity is-that it is a non-dialectical essence, extraordinary and singular. Wolfe's answer, then, is also double-race both is and is not a trope. And in the act of racial identification we all need both to insist on the historical categories for racial identity so deeply embedded in American economic structures and to disturb and displace them.

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In Fires in the Mirror, interviewee Angela Davis argues this point with the figure of a rope:

I am tentative about race but I am not tentative about racism.... I think we need to develop new ways of looking at community. Race in the old sense has become an increasingly obsolete

way of constructing community because it is based on immutable bio-

logical facts in a pseudo-scientific way. Now this does not mean that we

ignore racism. Racism is at the origins of this concept

of race. It's not the other way around .... As a matter of fact in order for European colonialists to attempt to conquer the world, to colonize the world, they had to construct this notion of the populations of the earth being

divided into certain firm biological communities, and that's what I think we have to go

back and consider. So when I use the word "race" now I

put it in quotations. Because if we don't transform this intransigent rigid notion of race, we will be caught up in this cycle of genocidal violence that is at the origins of our history. So I think ... that we have to find different ways of

coming together ....

I'm not suggesting that we do not anchor ourselves in our communities;

I feel very anchored in my various communities. But I think that, to use a metaphor, the rope attached to that anchor should be long enough to allow us to move into other communities, to understand and leam.

Angela Davis puts "race" in quotation marks, because it is, in a sense, a trap-a trap constructed by and upholding racism. And yet racism can- not simply be done away with by deeming the concept of race as a mere trap that we shouldn't fall into, and that we can avoid by not invoking "race." Race is a very real identity cate- gory which has become systemic, so to ignore race would be to allow systemic racism to continue as it is. But to live in rigid categories of race also only re- enmeshes them, and constrains us from imagining other possible identity cate- gories and communities, much like the Realist actor is constrained within already existing constructs of reality.

For theatre to capture racial and other identities in our current cultural moment, we need an other-oriented acting approach of the kind that Anna Deavere Smith is attempting to devel- op, which can present race as simulta- neously both anchored and mobile, both fact and act, both trap and trope. By approaching racial identity as per- formative, Anna Deavere Smith can question the fact of race without dis- counting racism's very real effects.

Notes 1. Anna Deavere Smith, "Identities, Mirrors and Distortions." The transcription is mine. 2. For a good overview of Experimental theater in the U.S. from 1955 to 1983, see McNamara and

Dolan. 3. For a discussion of Kennedy's Funnyhouse of a Negro as offering a post-structuralist model of

character and identiy, see my "Reversing Blackface Minstrelsy, Improvising Racial Identiy." 4. This quotation is taken from the published text. The words in the PBS production of Fires in the

Mirror vary slightly. 5. See Judith Butler, "Performative Acts," Gender Trouble, Bodies That Matter, and Excitable

Speech. For more discussion on identity as "performative," see Parker and Sedgwick. 6. On ritual social drama, see Turner. 7. Tania Modleski sees it more as a dialectic than a pattem of movement:"... Smith's work bril-

liantly oscillates between these two modes of repeftiton: repeftiton in the form of mimetic rivalry, root- ed in envy and anger, and repetition as a transformative process, yielding complex surprises and illustrafing how repetition is always repetition with a difference" (65).

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Butler, Judith. Bodies That Matter: On the Discursive Limits of "Sex. "New York: Routledge, 1993. . Excitable Speech: A Politics of the Performative. New York: Routledge, 1997 . Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity. New York: Routledge, 1990. . "Performative Acts and Gender Constitution: An Essay in Phenomenology and Feminist Theory." Performing Feminisms: Feminist Critical Theory and Theatre. Ed. Sue-Ellen Case. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins UP, 1990. 270-82.

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