Jek Nebenne! : A Method of Self-Healing in a Performance-Lecture
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33153/abdiseni.v12i2.3917Keywords:
performance-lecture, "jek nebenne!", self-healing methodAbstract
ABSTRACTThis artwork thesis depicts a multimedia performance, which combines several media such as photos, videos, sound recordings, installation, diagrams, charts, graphic design, and scientific journals, as well as digital cameras in performance-lecture. The creation practice borrowing the mode of a lecture combined with performance refers to "jek nebenne!" as the director's memory-recollection to start his work practice.The term "jek nebenne!" is not a standard language which means "don't mess with me!", it is used as the director's foothold in connecting a trauma in a family as a result of domestic violence which is reflected in the same experience of his mother, just like the experience of a female masseuse, brick miner, and farmworker for over thirty years in Bangkalan over the behavior of their respective husbands, as well as a shift of function from the feminine to the masculine. "Jek nebenne!" becomes some sort of creation reference which was often said by his mother, haunting him to this day and suspected to be the source of failure. Including the failure to integrate with the two performers who also experienced trauma (sexual and gender) until the show goes on. His position was leaked as a therapist to evacuate from the situation by sharing his sensitive emotion to the public; leaking of conflict concoction, exploration of body and ability, as well as performer's skill through medias mentioned above. The practice of performance-lecture focuses on psychodrama with a shift of dramaturgy from trauma to sensitive and intervening performer and the production team to show that domestic violence creates a prolonged scar. The director fears that the cruising range of his biography trauma will cause him to re-experience the vulnerability and leaving the audience with intricacy. The practice of such shift as a process of evacuation from acute trauma, as a continuation of "jek nebenne!" self-healing method for positive growth of the soul. Keywords: performance-lecture, "jek nebenne!", self-healing methodDownloads
References
Auslander, Philip. 2008. Theory for Performance Studies A Student’s Guide, London dan New York: Routledge Taylor & Francis Group.
Cerezo, Belén. “How to open my eyes? The performance-lecture as a method within artistic research.” Networking Knowledge 9 (3), Make, Mistake, Journey.
Sari, Syska Purnama. 2017. “Teknik Psikodrama dalam Mengembangkan Kontrol Diri Siswa.” Fokus Konseling Journal, E-Journal STKIP MPL (Muhammdiyah Pringsewu Lampung). Volume 3, No. 2 (2017), 123-137 ISSN Print : 2356-2102 ISSN Online : 2356-2099.
Thorsheim, Marta. "What It Means to Have a Trauma of Identity". https://goop.com/wellness/health/what-it-means-to-have-a-trauma-of-identity/, posted by Goop.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bFFjxEJrhFU, interview - the last performance (1998) - first part, posted by Jérôme Bel, December 15th 2016.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gXZslFUzYVw&t=17s, Performance Art in Southeast Asia – Panel 4, Part 2: Ho Rui An, posted by Haus der Kunst, July 31st 2019.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
License and Copyright Agreement
In submitting the manuscript to the journal, the authors certify that:
- Their co-authors authorize them to enter into these arrangements.
- The work described has not been formally published before, except as an abstract or part of a published lecture, review, thesis, or overlay journal. Please also carefully read Abdi Seni's Posting Your Article Policy at https://jurnal.isi-ska.ac.id/index.php/abdiseni/about/editorialPolicies#peerReviewProcess
- That it is not under consideration for publication elsewhere,
- That its publication has been approved by all the author(s) and by the responsible authorities – tacitly or explicitly – of the institutes where the work has been carried out.
- They secure the right to reproduce any material already published or copyrighted elsewhere.
- They agree to the following license and copyright agreement.
Copyright
Authors who publish with Abdi Seni agree to the following terms:
- Authors retain copyright and grant the journal right of first publication with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY-SA 4.0) that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgment of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors can enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for the non-exclusive distribution of the journal's published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgment of its initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) before and during the submission process, as it can lead to productive exchanges and earlier and greater citation of published work.
Licensing for Data Publication
Abdi Seni uses a variety of waivers and licenses that are specifically designed for and appropriate for the treatment of data:
- Open Data Commons Attribution License, http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/by/1.0/ (default)
- Creative Commons CC-Zero Waiver, http://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/
- Open Data Commons Public Domain Dedication and Licence, http://www.opendatacommons.org/licenses/pddl/1-0/
Other data publishing licenses may be allowed as exceptions (subject to approval by the editor on a case-by-case basis). They should be justified with a written statement from the author, which will be published with the article.
Open Data and Software Publishing and Sharing
The journal strives to maximize the replicability of the research published in it. Authors are thus required to share all data, code, or protocols underlying the research reported in their articles. Exceptions are permitted but must be justified in a written public statement accompanying the article.
Datasets and software should be deposited and permanently archived in inappropriate, trusted, general, or domain-specific repositories (please consult http://service.re3data.org and/or software repositories such as GitHub, GitLab, Bioinformatics.org, or equivalent). The associated persistent identifiers (e.g., DOI or others) of the dataset(s) must be included in the article's data or software resources section. Reference(s) to datasets and software should also be included in the article's reference list with DOIs (where available). Where no domain-specific data repository exists, authors should deposit their datasets in a general repository such as ZENODO, Dryad, Dataverse, or others.
Small data may also be published as data files or packages supplementary to a research article. However, the authors should prefer a deposition in data repositories in all cases.