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Article
Rehearsing Justice: Theatre, Sexuality and the Sacred
Feminist Theology (2017)
  • Victoria Rue, San Jose State University
Abstract
The theatre actor’s process in a rehearsal hall is reality and metaphor. It can be a rehearsal for justice, where we can live freely. In this laboratory the actor becomes all of us. Like the actor, we inhabit our bodies and our sexualities, sometimes as spiritual practice, or as sacred and creative, even as incarnations. In particular, women’s bodies remember what it is like to be no-body and what it is like to be a some-body. The texts of women’s bodies contain their history of pain, wellness and illness.

In creating a character, the actor creates a biography, an inner life, and the actor’s imagination aligns with the character’s situation. This is the creation of a character’s ‘living story’. Similarly, for all of us, this is akin to self knowledge. When women and sexual minorities tell their stories and listen to each others’ self knowledge, they are reading their bodies as texts. And worlds split open.
Keywords
  • Theatre,
  • actor,
  • character,
  • rehearsal,
  • the Sacred,
  • bodies,
  • women,
  • sexual minorities,
  • incarnation,
  • LGBT,
  • spiritual practice
Publication Date
January, 2017
DOI
10.1177/0966735016673259
Publisher Statement
This is the Accepted Manuscript of an article that was published by SAGE Publications in the journal Feminist Theology, volume 25, issue 2, 2017. The Version of Record can be found here.

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Citation Information
Victoria Rue. "Rehearsing Justice: Theatre, Sexuality and the Sacred" Feminist Theology Vol. 25 Iss. 2 (2017) p. 170 - 181 ISSN: 0966-7350
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/victoria_rue/24/