Performance criticism as critical pedagogy.
Ruge-Jones, Phil
Few themes have so dominated contemporary New Testament
interpretation in recent years as the Roman imperial context of those
writings. Whether interpreting the Gospels, Pauline letters, or
Revelation, New Testament scholars have shown how the "empire of
God" announced and embodied by Jesus and his followers offered an
alternative to the Roman Empire. This paper asks not about the empire
that ruled then, but about how power dynamics like those employed by
Rome continue to rule today.
Let me pause for a moment of confession regarding this challenge.
Sharing the abundance of anti-imperial interpretations opens my
university students' eyes to dynamics they had not seen in the
texts. Yet, and here the confession, I often suspect that I am promoting
anti-imperial ideas through an imperialistic mode of teaching. I
struggle within the restraints and possibilities of the twenty-first
century higher education classroom to nurture learning as a liberative
process for my students. I don't merely want to deliver ideas about
transformation and reciprocity, I want us to experience these virtues in
the classroom. I fear that the unintended irony a student offered me
rings true. He wrote, "Your understanding of freedom captivates
me." This current struggle is an old friend; as a parish pastor I
longed to help my congregation members to interpret the Bible, yet often
ended up teaching them my already defined interpretations.
Performance criticism of biblical texts
I have used biblical performance criticism in several ways in my
undergraduate classrooms. I perform stories for my Introduction to
Theology students; I have taught a unit on performance criticism in an
interpretation course; I have worked with students on extended
performances like the Gospel of Mark, Galatians, and the Jacob Esau
cycle. I also have participated in congregational "scripture by
heart" groups that prepare stories to tell in congregations. A few
years back, students who had seen me perform biblical texts in the
classroom asked me to teach them how to do it. We set up a one-credit
course which involved meeting for one hour a week with a group of five
students. We decided that we would all work for six weeks on a single
pericope from the Gospel of Luke. I chose the story of the ten lepers
(Luke 17:11-19) because it would come up in the lectionary in seven
weeks and thus the students could go out and tell the prepared text in a
congregation of their own choosing.
Every time we met we began with exercises that reminded us that we
are embodied people. (1) Then we read the text together, we performed
the text, and discussed what we saw as a result. During the first
session, I taught them the story using a method in which I would tell
the text line by line in an embodied way and they would repeat back to
me the words and motions I had offered them. This quickly led to an
awareness that my way of embodying the text, while it looked natural
when I did it, did not fit for all of them. So once the text was learned
in this way, each had the freedom to reinterpret it. We discovered that
there are many interpretations of the text that have integrity, but may
not be transferable in uncomplicated ways to other interpreters. We also
discovered that bodies make a difference. In fact, by the end of the six
weeks we found it unbelievable that this text, which deals so much with
the relationship between bodies, could be approached by any interpreter
in an un-embodied way and still be understood.
One exciting thing that took place in our repeated performances of
this text was a growing awareness of the multiplicity of meanings
possible within a relatively fixed text. Students are accustomed to
thinking of texts as having one correct interpretation they must
discover, forsaking all the others since those must be wrong. Many
scholars and parishioners operate under the same assumption. The act of
interpretation becomes profoundly more complex through this repetitive
process. While we still know that the text refuses to play a number of
ways--most shocking, of course, when we cannot get the text to do what
we assumed it does--we discover the amazing diversity of ways that the
text can be bodily interpreted with integrity. Some of these ways are
mutually negating, but they stubbornly stand there and confront us.
Jason played Jesus as wanting distance between himself and the lepers.
Taryn saw him drawn to them from the start. Rachel thought Jesus was
angry at the ungrateful nine who did not return; I felt him longing for
the even grander celebration all ten could have had. In one of the most
interesting breakthroughs, David played the Lord squatting down and
inviting the leper to stand up. As the leper stood, Jesus continued to
crouch on the ground. This image of Jesus physically looking up at the
leper standing over him provided an amazing moment of embodiment that
surprised and changed us not only as interpreters but also as human
beings. Throughout this process, we learned how power is configured in
and between bodies--those of the characters in the text as well as our
own, in aesthetic performance and in the performance we call life.
One main dynamic of this class continued to excite me. I was
responsible for making sure that learning took place, but I was never
under the illusion that I could control that process. I guided what one
performance pedagogue described as "rigorous indeterminacy and
openness." (2) I brought certain skills to the meeting:
storytelling experience, knowledge of Greek, knowledge of the ancient
context, elements of research I have formulated over the years. While
some of the students brought resources like these from their prior
training or their weekly homework, I still had an advantage of knowledge
in these specific areas.
However, these turned out to be only some of the tools that helped
interpret the texts. They may not have even been the most essential.
Everyone came with a body of knowledge that mattered for interpretation.
Some brought theatrical experience, others musical experience. Ritual
elements of the text came out as students improvised with drums or piano
in the background. A Spanish major stepped into the text speaking a
language strange to the audience members, and they saw things anew. A
slam poet slammed the text. Some used their sense of humor and timing.
Others in stillness told the tale. Beyond these skills, we found that
lived experience mattered. The illness that one suffered in his youth
brought insight. Time spent as a foreigner in Central America or Africa
shaped others. Harassment experienced by a lesbian shaped one
interpretation. Rejection by one's own family turned out to be a
hermeneutical resource. Recognition and confession of our own prejudices
even contributed to engagement of the text. Male and female bodies as
well as large and small bodies offered different impacts. Testimony to
healing events in life changed the conversation. The embraces we had
received throughout our lives came into play. Those who were emotionally
in touch and articulate helped us delve into areas others of us would
have missed.
In fact, for me, one of the most amazing things happened during a
class session in about the fourth week when I personally was shattered
by my home congregation's violent conversations around sexuality. I
found myself--I definitely did not feel in control here--being cared for
and attended to by my students in a way that I would never allow in any
other classroom, but which was clearly a gift for me. The community that
had lived in Luke's healing story for weeks became a place for my
own healing. At other moments, the same happened for others in the group
when their needs became present. The community of healing performance
shaped us in a way that was truly gracious. I cannot help but wonder how
my home congregation's approach to the Bible and each other might
have changed if we had engaged in this practice together. We might have
noted the complex ways that God has entangled the divine story with our
personal stories and thus understood each other better.
Performance criticism as critical pedagogy
About forty years ago, Paulo Freire found himself sitting among
illiterate peasants in Brazilian villages trying to teach them to read.
Dissatisfied with the teaching methods typically used in such contexts,
he sought an alternative pedagogy. Freire articulated a way of learning
that did not assume that he as the teacher held all knowledge or that he
needed to transfer information from his head to his students'
minds. Even though he knew how to read and they did not, he understood
that education had to be co-intentional. True learning only takes place
when the participants, Freire included, respected the concerns,
intentions, and wisdom of all. Both he as facilitator and his students
as participants read the world together as partners. He critiqued the
educational patterns most of us know too well noting that they relied on
a banking metaphor: the teacher deposits a wealth of knowledge into the
students' heads. Freire states, "In the banking concept of
education, knowledge is a gift bestowed by those who consider themselves
knowledgeable upon those whom they consider to know nothing." (3)
Students are to "patiently receive, memorize, and repeat." (4)
According to Freire, this system creates passive subjects as cogs in the
economic machine. Freire deplores how educators with progressive ideas
often fall into the same non-progressive pedagogy. He says, "At
bottom, this is education reproducing the authoritarianism of the
capitalist mode of production. It is deplorable how progressive
educators, as they analyze and fight against the reproduction of the
dominant ideology in the schools, actually reproduce the authoritarian
ideology. ..." (5)
Let me extend the economic metaphor of capitalism. While many
progressive educators do work to oppose the blatantly imperialistic
modes of fundamentalism, we often do so with a pedagogy that more
closely resembles "free trade" models. We desire to lift the
poor out of their state of undeveloped resources and provide them with
the tools they need to be truly modern. In free trade agreements, the
United States often claims to seek a mutually beneficial model of
economic exchange. Yet people outside of the centers of power point out
that this mode, which appears kinder or gentler, in fact uses the
rhetoric of mutuality to cloak the real domination that occurs. As a
Christian friend put it about our liberal interventions in her
country's economy, "It is good for the Chilean economy, but
not for the people of Chile."
The lack of mutuality in the classroom replicates the values of the
larger systems in which it is embedded. Freire believed that education
as asking questions and seeking answers in community would create a
different kind of world. He expected a world to arise out of dialog that
would embody the virtues of 1) faith in our companions on the journey,
2) hope for the transformation of the world, 3) love actively serving
the neighbor 4) humility, and finally 5) continued dialog in mutuality.
(6) While I may not list any of these as course objectives on my
syllabi, the students I remember and cherish most are those with whom I
have found myself humbly learning into practices of faith, hope, love,
and mutuality. Among those beloved students are those with whom I
studied the story of the ten lepers and many others who have struggled
to perform biblical texts faithfully. If this can happen in an academic
classroom, how much more might this process radically reshape
congregational life into the image of God's empire?
Critical pedagogy and performance criticism
In a journal such as this, I could easily and, without much risk,
point out how fundamentalism in its various forms, in both content and
process, replicates imperialistic patterns. However, I return to my
earlier point: I often find myself captivating my students with lectures
on the transforming freedom that God's empire promises. I struggle
to find strategies that move toward mutuality, but then often find
myself relinquishing the real professorial contributions I could make.
In those cases, the students sit in small groups and share their
ignorance or boredom or more likely what went on at last night's
party. While this is not inevitable and skilled educators know how to
avoid these traps, I continue to look for methods that respect what my
students and I each bring to the classroom. Performance criticism as I
described it above has been the best resource I have found to do this.
The work of Freire has been built on and expanded by bell hooks.
She writes passionately about the need for new educational models that
move in Freire's trajectory. I will connect the dynamics she speaks
of within classrooms to imperialist or anti-imperialist options outside
of the classrooms. I will ask how the values in class are replications
of the larger systems in which they participate or, alternatively, are
visions of the hopes for different systems in the future.
Traditional classrooms, hooks notes, are organized hierarchially.
Professors are those who come with knowledge; students at best are those
without knowledge resources, or at worst are perceived as those who only
have prejudicial and misguided resources that must be wiped away before
real intellectual construction can begin. In theology courses,
professors may look at students and see biblical illiterates or, worse,
Sunday school-educated people with misguided ideas that must first be
cleared away before the real learning takes place. In this model, the
professor has the resources and the students bring only deficits. Of her
own experience, hooks writes, "In the institutions where I have
taught, the prevailing pedagogical model is authoritarian, hierarchical
in a coercive and often dominating way, and certainly one where the
voice of the professors is the 'privileged' transmitter of
knowledge." (7) Similar dynamics are not alien to many pastor/laity
relationships. These dynamics also reflect international relationships
where the centers of power come filled with economic wisdom to bring
along those who are bogged down in what are perceived to be backward
ways. Once the situation is structured in this way, the one with
positive resources will need to control the conversation and practices
to produce the desired outcomes. These outcomes are, of course, desired
by the center, not the margins.
The multiple resources that facilitate interpretation via
performance criticism destabilize the power relationships. If knowledge
is based strictly on disciplinary research, the teacher or pastor has a
major edge. However, if we recognize the multiple resources that provide
insight into performance critical interpretation, then we move toward
mutuality because all parties bring resources that will affect the
conversation. This does not mean that I am no longer responsible for the
integrity of the learning process, but that I guide it seeking
reciprocity that moves us in the direction of mutuality. Even the
sharing of my own expertise becomes a way of better equipping the others
for their own interpretive work.
This all happens within the honest recognition that complete
mutuality will not be possible since in the end I assign the grade. The
cloaking of my real authority does not serve the process well since that
same authority tends to assert itself under the table when I do not
place it clearly on the table. One of the major issues in the free trade
agreements our government makes is that they are publicly presented as
an accord made between equal partners at the table. Yet under the table
or behind the scenes, the center imposes regulations and restrictions
that limit the real options available to their so-called partners.
Within our classroom, we mitigated the imbalance of power by having the
course be pass/fail, thus allowing the public performance to be the
primary motivator of student effort. Fellow classmates and eventual
audience provided feedback on the quality of the work. Both content and
form came together nicely as we critiqued power relationships between
characters within the text while trying to create alternative power
relationships within a non-hierarchal classroom.
One of the lovely results of this educational process is that the
students all share and see the intellectual work of their peers. In my
other courses, most of the assignments involve writing papers or exams
that only I ever read. Through performance criticism their personal
reflections go public. The students have exerted local control of the
product they produced that both serves the world and serves as an
opportunity for the enrichment of their own lives.
Performance criticism makes its most impressive contribution to
liberative education by acknowledging the role of our bodies in the
process of learning. As hooks notes, "Liberative pedagogy really
demands that one work in the classroom, and that one work with the
limits of the body, work both with and through and against those limits
..." (8) While those traditionally granted educational authority
can have "the privilege of denying their body," (9) this is
not a luxury offered her as a black woman. The focus on academics as
"mind" activity at the expense of body leads to an illusion of
neutrality that is a luxury not universally extended. She states,
The erasure of the body encourages us to think that we are listening
to neutral, objective facts, facts that are not particular to who is
sharing the information. ... We must return ourselves to a state of
embodiment in order to deconstruct the way power has been
traditionally orchestrated in the classroom, denying subjectivity to
some groups and according it to others. By recognizing subjectivity
and the limits of identity, we disrupt that objectification that is
so necessary in a culture of domination. (10)
What is more, the "luxury" of disembodiment is unhealthy
for both the privileged and those denied privilege. We all suffer this
separation of mind from body as brokenness and fragmentation. Through
the possibilities of performance criticism we can begin to
"re-member what has been dismembered."(11) When everyone
"struggle[s] bodily with course content" (12) we come to know
things about ourselves, our world, and the texts in a more profound way.
We create a literal body of knowledge.
This holistic experience of education in the interpretation of
biblical texts also allows us to explore emotional dimensions of texts.
These were stories that were told with passion. To know them only as
words on a page is fundamentally to be ignorant of the way that they
were first sent into the world. Knowing through feigned objectivity
facilitates ignorance of ourselves as human beings. While Western
epistemology has been highly attentive to the way emotional passion can
imprison rationality, our learners are aware of how rationality stripped
of passion imprisons one in dullness and banality. Embodied
interpretation demands the exploration of our own passionate impulses as
well as those of the original authors. This too has a transformative
effect as we deal with pain in our own lives, pain that is often
ignored, above all in the classroom. Having become aware of our own
experiences of brokenness, we are broken open to engage compassionately
others who suffer. Yet the whole range of human emotions comes into play
through performance criticism. The joy and laughter that inevitably
pours out of these sessions makes them delightful places to occupy.
Space will not allow me to go into all of the other ways that
performance criticism helps us become whole, but I would like to at
least suggest some of the borders within and outside of ourselves that
performance criticism causes us to cross. As Bible stories intersect
with our own lives, we see the religious facet of life reconnected to
other aspects of life. We see sacred dimensions as well as those that
call for lament in all of life. As a result, classroom life becomes
filled with the rest of life and our lives become more reflective of
what was learned in the classroom. Study and praxis come together as do
work and pleasure. Our explorations in the particular discipline of
biblical studies also lead to self-knowledge and awareness of the world.
The disciplinary lines that run like scars through our institutions
begin to fade as aesthetics, politics, literature, and dramatic media
find common ground in performance. In congregations, the theological
positions that separate one from another also begin to shift. The
divisions of our world break down as we try on, hear, and engage in
multiple interpretations bodily. We learn new ways to interact with each
other since "performance enables an imaginative leap into other
kinds of bodies, other ways of being in the world, and in so doing, it
opens up concrete and embodied possibilities for resistance, reform, and
renewal." (13)
This holistic practice moves us to know beyond what we have known
and to do this bodily. I have tried to follow a pedagogy that hooks maps
out in the hope that it will yield something new. She writes of her
hope:
Urging all of us to open our minds and hearts so that we can know
beyond the boundaries of what is acceptable, so that we can think and
rethink, so that we can create new visions, I celebrate reaching that
enables transgressions--a movement against and beyond boundaries. It
is that movement which makes education a practice of freedom. (14)
Final confession
I began with a confession and I conclude with another. I am aware
that these little gatherings of learning communities will not bring
multinational hierarchies to their knees. Global imperialism did not
crumble as a handful of us gathered in a classroom in Seguin, Texas, and
embodied God's word, any more than Rome rolled over and died in the
presence of Jesus and the divine empire that he announced. I am aware
that I may be guilty here of what McLaren and Farahmandpur call
"airbrushed insurgency" (15) and "Jacuzzi
socialism." (16) Yet there are ways that I have sought to move the
analysis of these texts beyond resistance to classroom imperialism and
out into the world for transformation.
First of all, we linked power challenges within the texts to power
relationships in our context. Where it was not possible to make this
apparent in performance, we at least discussed it in our conversations.
What are the mechanisms of exclusion and domination in our own world
that mirror the dynamics reported in the text? In a later course, the
key to attending to these dynamics has been immersion experiences in
marginalized communities. A trip to the U.S.-Mexican border opens ours
eyes to see global dynamics that are hidden from us on campus. Several
of our participants lived for a full semester in Africa, Spain, or other
global contexts. They came with lived experiences and tools for
political, economic interpretation. We welcomed the perspectives that
their travel offered on the biblical texts.
Ideally, the participants in my courses are as diverse as the
university campus itself, with members of different classes,
ethnicities, genders, nationalities, sexual orientations, and religious
identifications. Beyond this, we must struggle to make our universities
and congregations places that more accurately represent these same kinds
of diversity present in our surrounding communities. In a world where
even hints of mutuality are all too rare, perhaps a concrete taste of
partnership in a learning community or congregational Bible study will
create a longing that inspires us to ask: What would the world be like
if this kind of reciprocity were to spring up in the cracks of
globalization? Might it look like the mustard weed
infestation--decentralized, multi-formed, out of control, but
alive--description in Jesus' parable (Mark 4:30-32)? Thus the
community of storytellers, while not bringing in the fullness of
God's empire, could experience '"a staging ground for
self and social renewal' by requiring students and teachers [or
pastors and laity] to rehearse more equitable and impassioned ways of
being and behaving." (17) To participate in and contribute to such
a vision is a gift and challenge that not only has renewed my pedagogy,
but disclosed and nurtured the power of Christian hope in my life.
(1.) We used exercises from Richard Swanson's Provoking the
Gospel (Cleveland: Pilgrim Press, 2004).
(2.) Richard Schechner, "Forward" in Teaching Performance
Studies, eds. Nathan Stucky and Cynthia Wimmer, (Carbondale and
Edswardsville, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002), x.
(3.) Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed translated by Myra
Ramos (New York: The Seabury Press, 1969), 58.
(4.) Ibid.
(5.) Paulo Freire, "The Pedagogy of Asking Questions" in
The Paulo Freire Reader, eds. Ana Maria Araujo Freire and Donaldo Macedo
(New York: Continuum International Publishing Group, 2000), 229.
(6.) Paulo Freire, Pedagogy of the Oppressed, 76f.
(7.) bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice
of Freedom (New York: Routledge, 1994), 85.
(8.) Ibid., 138.
(9.) Ibid., 137.
(10.) Ibid., 139.
(11.) Mark Kline Taylor uses this imagery in Remembering Esperanza:
A Cultural-Political Theology for North American Praxis (Maryknoll,
N.Y.: Orbis Books, 1990), 22.
(12.) Elyse Lamm Pineau, "Critical Performance Pedagogy:
Fleshing Out the Politics of Liberatory Education," in Teaching
Performance Studies, Nathan Stucky and Cynthia Wimmer, eds. (Carbondale
and Edswardsville, Ill.: Southern Illinois University Press, 2002), 50.
(13.) Ibid., 51.
(14.) hooks, 12.
(15.) Peter McLaren and Ramin Farahmandpur, Teaching Against Global
Capitalism and the New Imperialism: A Critical Pedagogy (New York:
Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, Inc., 2005), 18.
(16.) Ibid., 21.
(17.) Pineau, 53. restating and expanding a quotation from a
Western States Communication Conference Keynote address by Earnest Boyer
in 1994.
Phil Ruge-Jones
Associate Professor of Theology, Texas Lutheran University