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Home Fires: Creating a Pacific Theatre in the Diaspora
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2001
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Home FiresEducationNew Zealand TheatreContemporary CulturePopular CultureCultural StudiesCultural AnalysisPerformance TheoryTheatre HistoryPacific IslandersDramaTheatre ArchitectureCultural PracticeTheatreScenographyDiaspora StudyCulturePlaywritingPerforming ArtsPacific IslandArtsCultural AnthropologyTheatre StudyDiasporic Movement
Theatre created by Pacific Islanders is perhaps the most recent significant development in New Zealand theatre of the 1990s. Exploring this new phenomenon within a concept of diaspora, productions, producers and themes are linked to notions of displacement, home, and disruption on several levels. Three recent plays and productions are examined: Think of a Garden by the Samoan-American John Kneubuhl, which explores memory as the basis of diasporic identity; Home Fires , a collaborative production between Pacific Island and Ma°ori artists in which a new kind of syncretic theatrical style transcending specific cultural codes was developed; and Tatau – Rites of Passage , a performance created by the Christchurch-based group Pacific Underground and the Australian community theatre group Zeal Theatre which explores the notion of ritual reincorporation – involving actual tattooing on stage – as a means of transcending diaspora and repairing the ruptures caused by it.