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2017 VCE Drama and Theatre Studies Playlist: Additional resources Unit 3 Theatre Studies: The Yellow Wave by Jane Miller Study of this playscript will require discussion about the concept of ‘stereotypes’ and how stereotyping can be used as a theatrical device. This discussion will also focus on attitudes to cultural diversity in 19th-century Australia, perhaps comparing these views to those held by contemporary Australians. Students will also need to learn about populist ‘invasion’ conspiracy theories that circulated in 19th-century Australia. Students need to understand that these characters and the way that the actors realise them in performance are not ‘real’; they are constructed to communicate ideas and messages through the use of acting skills and the application of stagecraft. The Macquarie Dictionary defines stereotype as ‘a set form; convention; standardised idea or concept’. As students undertake study of the playscript and its interpretation in performance, classroom discussion will focus on a range of issues, including attitudes expressed by characters in the play that are regarded as xenophobic in contemporary Australia. The following information is provided to assist teachers to ensure that the issues are discussed in a balanced manner. ‘Stereotyping’ as a theatrical device or convention Stereotyping is a device used by writers, theatre makers and others to create a representation of a scene, an idea, a person or a group of people that, essentially, is a caricature. A stereotypical representation usually exaggerates characteristics popularly thought to be typical of a person or group of people. Stereotyping can be manipulated to communicate racial prejudice or other forms of xenophobia, or to create satire or other forms of comedy. Class discussion might focus on the stereotypical characters that feature in The Yellow Wave, for example, identifying these characters and describing the representation they communicate. When students evaluate the performance they can explore how the stereotype was created and enhanced through application of stagecraft or use of performance and expressive skills. ‘Invasion’ fiction and related conspiracy theories in 19th-century Australia The Yellow Wave is an adaptation of a 19th-century novel by Kenneth Mackay. Subtitled ‘a romance of the Asiatic Invasion of Australia’, Mackay’s book tells the story of the invasion of Australia, by a Russian-led Mongol force, and is a forgotten piece of Australian fiction. The novel on which the show is based is of significance in its own right as an early Australian example of a literary genre referred to as ‘invasion fiction’. One of the defining features of ‘invasion fiction’ is a narrative that articulates a fear of attack by a foreign or alien power. This genre was established in the 19th century and remained prevalent up to the First World War. A distinctive current of xenophobia runs through Mackay’s novel and its title, The Yellow Wave, has clear associations with the phrase ‘yellow peril’ also thought to have been coined in the 19th century as propaganda to characterise the perceived threat to European countries by the economic and military growth of China and Japan. © VCAA 2017 VCE Drama and Theatre Studies Playlist: Additional resources Discussion may also focus on contemporary ‘invasion’ theories and commentary. The perspectives of different commentators should be identified and compared to historical views. Resources Lewis, L 2007, Cross-racial casting: changing the face of Australian theatre, Currency House, Strawberry Hills. In 2007 Lee Lewis’ seminal Platform Paper on cross-racial casting brought to the fore the lack of representation of Asian actors on Australian stages, and one of the drivers for the creation of The Yellow Wave was the lack of opportunities to showcase the work of Asian-Australian artists. The Yellow Wave achieves this aim in the context of a production that deals with ideas of representation and race while also questioning the place of gender and type in relation to performance. The casting also underpins much of the subtext and subversion in the show and leaves the script free of didacticism making the show both entertaining and multifaceted. MacCallum, D 1864, The Alleged Russian Plans for the Invasion of Australia, <http://openjournals.library.usyd.edu.au/index.php/ART/article/viewFile/5473/6108> accessed 18 October, 2016. Duncan MacCallum provides an overview of the news that reached the Australian colonies via newspapers carried by the Alexandra which arrived in Sydney in November 1864. The article refers to many of the characters in the playscript and summarises an article in the Times: Russia was prepared, as The Times put it, to make a swoop even though she knew that her fleet might not long keep the seas against English and French forces. According to The Times, instructions had been issued to the Russian admirals on the American Californian coast, directing them to leave their ports to rendezvous and to be ready in the event of a war with England to bear down on the Australian colonies, first on Melbourne, then on Hobart, then on Adelaide, Sydney and New Zealand. The circumstances in which Russia and England might have been at war in I864 comprised, of course, the Polish Insurrection … Mackay, K 1895, The yellow wave: A romance of the Asiatic invasion of Australia, Richard Bentley, London. Further Reading Boyce, D 2015, Invasion of Sydney: fears and counter-measures of an isolated colony, Ultimo, NSW : Halstead Press. Burke, A 2008, Fear of security : Australia's invasion anxiety, Cambridge University Press, rev. ed., Port Melbourne. Clarke, PA 2007, ‘Indigenous spirit and ghost folklore of ‘settled’ Australia’, Folklore, 118(2), pp.141-161. Holden, R & Holden, N, 2001, Bunyips: Australia's folklore of fear, National Library Australia. Irving, T & Cahill, R 2010, Radical Sydney: Places, Portraits and Unruly Episodes, UNSW Press, Sydney. Oliver, P 2001, ‘Interpreting ‘Japanese Activities’ in Australia, 1888-1945’, Journal of the Australian War Memorial, , no. 36, pp. 1. Peckham, R (ed.), 2015, Empires of Panic: Epidemics and Colonial Anxieties. Hong Kong University Press. © VCAA Page 2 2017 VCE Drama and Theatre Studies Playlist: Additional resources Walker, D, 2002, ‘Survivalist anxieties Australian responses to Asia, 1890s to the present’, Australian Historical Studies, 33(120), pp.319-330. © VCAA Page 3 2017 VCE Drama and Theatre Studies Playlist: Additional resources Unit 4 Theatre Studies: The Merchant of Venice by William Shakespeare As students undertake performance analysis of The Merchant of Venice, classroom discussion will focus on a range of issues prompted by the relationship between acting, direction and design in Bell Shakespeare’s production of the play. Background In this production, while Shylock has no further text after the court scene, we will see him again as a broken man; recently baptised a Christian, robbed of his Jewish garb and completely alone. The production highlights the emotional costs of the trauma he experiences and the lack of freedom he is allowed. An additional sequence at the end of the final scene will focus on Jessica, Shylock’s daughter. She is constrained by her father and her religion and in the end rejects both, running away to be with her love, Lorenzo. In deciding to be with Lorenzo Jessica must convert to Christianity. In the final scene of our production the audience will focus on Jessica, who must hear of the forced baptism of her father and his defeat, from her new friends and family, the supposedly victorious Christians. Jessica must find a way to reconcile their actions and her own in this scene. She will be asking the questions the audience is also asking. The production will highlight the extreme views of both groups in this scene. There are no winners at the end of the courtroom scene. Shylock is robbed of his money, his religion and his daughter. And the lovers Portia and Bassanio, Nerissa and Gratiano, who we want to respect and celebrate, have revealed a hatred at their core. No one wins. It is uncomfortable. It is a complexity that we are often denied in our narratives. Resources Teachers are advised to use material from a range of sources to support a balanced discussion that considers different perspectives on religious freedom and the practice of forced conversion – a reality in Shakespeare’s times. Most reputable commentaries on The Merchant of Venice and introductions to quality editions of the play also refer to these issues. Teachers can use these study guide/s and notes to develop support materials and resources. Suggested reading prior to viewing the production: Dautch, A (n.d.), A Jewish Reading of the Merchant of Venice, British Library, <https://www.bl.uk/shakespeare/articles/a-jewish-reading-of-the-merchant-of-venice>, Creative Commons, Non-Commercial 4.0 International. James Shapiro, ‘How were the Jews regarded in 16th-century England?’ <https://www.bl.uk/shakespeare/articles/how-were-the-jews-regarded-in-16th-centuryengland> Further reading Halperin, M 2016, ‘How “The Merchant of Venice” has become an unexpected analysis of the nature of oppression’, Flaborwire website, <http://flavorwire.com/585385/how-the-merchant-ofvenice-has-become-an-unexpected-analysis-of-the-nature-of-oppression> Roth, E 2011, ‘The Merchant of Venice: The play and the Jews’, My Jewish Learning website, <http://www.myjewishlearning.com/article/the-merchant-of-venice/>. Note: both the article and the posted comments provide relevant material. © VCAA Page 4