Tuesday, May 6, 2025
Blog Page 452

Bare derrieres for bums on seats? Shock value on stage

By the time Iqbal Khan’s Anthony and Cleopatra reached its dénouement at the RSC, we were almost three hours in and, despite the production being an excellent one, I could feel my eyelids becoming heavy. Not under Khan’s watch. Before clasping a venomous asp to her breast, Cleopatra whipped off one of her many opulent costumes and appeared momentarily nude before slipping on an equally resplendent dressing gown. Needless to say, rows of slightly slouching torsos jolted bolt upright in waves across the auditorium in a domino effect. Cut to a few years later and I was working behind the theatre bar as Prasanna Puwanarajah revamped the 17th century Venice Preserved in 1980s punk style – complete with S&M PVC gimp suits and a trolley of sex toys. Members of the audience frequently left during the interval and registered their discomfort with staff.

This is nothing new, of course. From the sexual revolution of the 1960s, we’ve seen writers and directors un-corseting our strait-laced sentiments one controversial production at a time. The extensive nudity of the 1969 Oh! Calcutta!, an avant-garde theatre review (punning on “O quel cul t’as!“, French for “What an arse you have!”) shocked while Sarah Kane’s 1998 Cleansed caused much fainting with its graphic scenes of torture, mutilation and sex. I would argue that our generation has now become somewhat immune to the ‘shock value’ of sex and nudity. While my grandmother once spoke to me of being aghast at ITV’s The Durrell’s, we are the generation who barely (if you’ll pardon the pun) bat an eyelid at voyeuristic cameras goggling at the night-time activities of Love Island contestants or who watch as sliding doors reveal a selection of nude bodies for the perusal and preference of another in Naked Attraction. And it’s not just sex and nudity – from the films of Quentin Tarantino to Game of Thrones, violence on screen has fallen into unprecedented depths of blood, guts and gore in recent years.

Nevertheless, shocking displays in theatre does still tend to hit the headlines. Unlike film or TV, even for the most uninhibited amongst us, there is still something startling about actually experiencing such scenes; at seeing them so close at hand, in the flesh. I feel that it is valuable to be periodically shocked. We don’t, after all, go to the theatre to see the world through rose-tinted spectacles or to be delivered palatable entertainment on a mundane platter which fails to challenge us or penetrate the grey of ordinary life. Like the critic Michael Billington, however, I also feel that ‘there is a vital distinction to be made between the moral awakening that comes from shock and the visceral impact of unmitigated horror’.

I feel a kind of weariness every time I see theatre which capitalises on seriously graphic nudity, sex or violence. I’d like to turn to the director and say, ‘Don’t try and shock me. Don’t try and use my wincing and curling toes to make me out as some unenlightened prude.’ Through useless shock, I’m being played, unwittingly pounced on from the comfort of my seat, and it’s no surprise, therefore, to find that ‘shock’ has its etymology in military language.

At times, I can’t help but feel a frustration with and a resistance to the style of theatre coined by Aleks Sierz as ‘in-yer-face-theatre.’ Emerging in the 90s, it’s aggressive, provocative and brash, invading the audience’s personal space and grabbing them by the scruff of their neck for a good shaking. Leaving Anthony and Cleopatra, the nudity felt gratuitous and gimmicky: if having Cleopatra bare all to the audience was so crucial, then why was she so swiftly re-clad? Not only is there no nudity in the play but it seemed to encroach on the aura of untouchability which surrounds her sexuality. The Greek tragedians never showed extreme violence on stage but always related the information to the audience through a messenger and whilst this feels egregious today, I empathise with the Greek proclivity to ‘leave something to the imagination’.

If nudity, sex and violence are fundamental themes which the writer has explicitly and thoroughly explored through their writing, or the heightened staging of them truly adds to the audience’s understanding, then far be it from me to stand in the way of educational theatre. But, if you assume baring derrières is enough to get my bum on the seat, then you can think again.

Stage Adaptions: Midnight’s Children

Iconic, encyclopaedic, and kaleidoscopic, Salman Rushdie’s Midnight’s Children has garnered a healthy sense of both wariness and respect from critics and readers alike over the course of its 39 years. It was, after all, dubbed the ‘Booker of all Bookers’, and its sprawling 446-page exploration of Indian politics spans nearly 7 decades, got Rushdie sued for libel by the Indian Prime Minister, and re-invented the post-Independence Indian English canon. It is nothing if not ground-breaking.

It’s no surprise, then, that Rushdie’s 2003 decision to adapt the novel for the RSC stage, alongside theatre-scene mainstays Tim Supple and Simon Reade, ruffled a few feathers. As critic Philip Fisher wrote, the venture seemed to sit “somewhere between brave and foolhardy”. The eventual outcome was tepid, earning smatterings of three and four-star reviews; the production failed spectacularly to rise to the heights of its literary predecessor. Its glory arrived, though, in its attention to that truth which seems so often neglected in adaptations – that the page and the stage are fundamentally different.

Rushdie’s works hinge around a nuanced understanding of colonial and postcolonial India, and a sense that, as he writes, “history has become debateable”. The (post)colonial ‘condition’, he believes, is far too complex to be lumped into one, empirical history with a capital H. As his protagonist, Saleem Sinai, quips, “reality is a question of perspective” – and whether that perspective is upper-class or lower-class, Western or Indian, matters. The magical realist approach to this subjectivity is what made Rushdie’s name; he lashes Saleem to Indian history from the get-go (“at the precise instant of India’s arrival at independence, I tumbled forth into the world”), and the eras of Partition and Independence are charted by a tumultuous personal history involving metaphorically potent growing pains, identity questioning, and debauchery.

Rushdie wasn’t content, though, to simply mirror a national and stringently political history through these personal goings-on – this seemed too much like a concession to its Imperial gaze. The genius of the novel is in Saleem’s complete unreliability as a narrator; he is hilariously egotistical and often “cannot say […] what the actual sequence of events might have been”. In a deft postmodernist stroke, Rushdie frees his characters from the compulsion to map out a comprehensive history, instead allowing their individual stories to take centre stage. History is not about large-scale, national events anymore – it is about the impact which it has on real people. Readers can view, finally, (post)colonial India not through distanced Western eyes, as has so often been the case, but through those of its own people.

The novel is intensely ideologically complex, then, and the interplay between its genres is vital to its power. Those who were sceptical of the stage adaptation seemed justified – would these subtle dynamics work under the probing light of the par cans? Could they even exist? Rushdie, Supple, and Reade were far too savvy to think so. Magical realism and postmodernism’s wildly different modes of expression would be difficult, near impossible, to translate faithfully from recorded word to live action; the adaptation needed to translate their clashes and confluences in some other way. This classic enigma is cracked in the Midnight’s Children stage play with a simple equation of genre and media, and the addition to the stage of a huge, technicolour screen. The play opens with “a film screen [which] dominates the stage and shows us the infinite crowd that is India today”, which then displays the “the atomic mushroom cloud” of Hiroshima. This is history in its least personal form -large-scale and absolute – and it seems as if it will remain separate from the emotional scenes depicted on-stage involving Saleem and his family members. This is Rushdie’s magical realist allegory as concocted for the theatre, with the personal on-stage divided from the national on-screen, and both irreconcilable.

Soon, though, worlds begin to collide. When Saleem first discovers his random telepathic abilities, which allow him to communicate with those who share his birthday, magic bleeds into the screen’s blunt reality – “film. The sound of the riot merges with the sound of the Midnight’s Children”. Postmodernism has intruded, as it does in the novel, in the graceful commingling of what the audience has come to take as two delineated halves of the performance, one live and one recorded. Through the second half of the play, the screen becomes increasingly bizarre and subjective, militantly un-linear in its display of “a calendar ruffled by a breeze, its pages flying off in rapid succession to denote the passing of the years”. Both stage and screen, then, become the locus of unreality, as the play dissolves the boundaries between its own media in a virtuosic recognition of Indian history’s complicated reality. It is not enough to project “[the] First World War, marching soldiers” and separate it from small-seeming lives which the actors depict – these are one and the same.

This media manipulation is a triumph, but the original decision to adapt Midnight’s Children for the stage lends itself equally importantly to Rushdie’s (post)colonial imaginings. The German theatre guru Hans-Thies Lehmann famously stated that theatre presents a completely fictitious world, which requires the “imagination and empathy of the spectator to follow and complete the illusion” – each audience member, then, perceives and reacts to a play completely differently. The idea of some sort of real ‘truth’ in drama becomes absurd, and this is a strikingly familiar concept for the Rushdie reader. It reminds us of the author’s refusal of an objective history – the intensely personal experience of watching a play becomes a perfect representation of the “one billion kinds of difference” which exist in postcolonial India.

The Midnight’s Children adaptation works because of its sensitive translation of the verbal to the visual, which produces intermingling poles and shifting perceptions of a power perhaps more movingly than in the original novel. It works, too, because the qualities of drama itself lend themselves so brilliantly to Rushdie’s worldview; not to stage the play would have been to stunt the artistic possibilities of the story. The show may well have ended up, as critic David Finkle deemed it, a “well-meaning shambles”– but it was an expertly designed one.

A ‘Clean Break’ from crime?

After mastering the downward facing dog-chaturanga-upward facing dog transition, my isolation development peaked and it was time to do some work. I watched the Donmar Trilogy’s production of Shakespeare’s Henry IV, directed by Phyllida Lloyd. The trilogy was created with Clean Break, a theatre company who work with women who have been in – or are at risk of entering – prison. All three plays were set in prisons with the all-female casts transforming Shakespeare’s classics into explorations of vulnerability, gang-violence, addiction and power.

Clean Break was set up in 1977 by two inmates in the high security wing of Durham prison: Jenny Hicks and Jackie Holborough. Later, they formed a troupe with 19 fellow prisoners, becoming the first British prisoners to perform outside prison. However, they were forced to perform under the condition that they wouldn’t advertise the fact that they were prisoners. Hicks and Holborough pursued the company after their release, offering a support group and skill development. They now proudly advertise themselves as a “a women’s theatre company changing lives and changing minds – on stage, in prison and in the community”.

Henry IV opened at the Donmar Warehouse in 2014 with Harriet Walter in the title role and Clare Dunne as Hal, who in this version is an inmate struggling with addiction. The cast are escorted into the chain link enclosure where the audience await. Audience and inmates are now locked up together: equals. The scene is set for Hal’s words to haunt the corridors of the prison. His promise to change when time demands it could just as easily be spoken by a prisoner as a prince. This promise to break ‘through the foul and ugly mists’ feels unsettlingly empty when confronted with the statistic that 48% of prisoners re-offend within a year of being released. When compared to the 5% of Clean Break members who re-offend, the value of their work can start to be appreciated.

Their work fits into a wider focus on the relationship between arts and rehabilitation which has grown recently, through social enterprises like Gareth Malone’s Aylesbury prison choir, asking age old questions about the purpose of prisons. Is our criminal justice system failing some of the most vulnerable in society? It’s easy (and often more comfortable) to judge those in the criminal justice system and discard them. Listen to just one of the songs written and sung by one of the Aylesbury inmates, or one of the monologues written by 40 members and associates of Clean Break, and condemnation becomes rightfully impossible.

Laura Bates’s Shakespeare in Shackles program provides yet another example of how we stereotype and categorise to protect ourselves with an illusion of order, because we feel threatened by disorder. The transformations of high security prisoners – often those who are serving life sentences in solitary confinement for crimes as severe as murder – demonstrate the power of theatre to provoke self-reflection and offer support in a way that little else can. Bates’s book Shakespeare Saved My Life focuses on Larry Newton, an inmate who had been serving a life sentence for murder in solitary confinement. Convicted at 19, he had served over a decade and needed to escape; he was prepared for suicide through homicide (committing murder to receive a death sentence). Bates began her work at the prison around this time, sharing Shakespeare with the prisoners to see if they could find personal connections with it. Having never heard of Shakespeare before the study, Newton now claims that Shakespeare saved his life – gave him purpose. He has since acted with fellow prisoners and aided in the development of educational programmes to help fellow prisoners and young people at risk of offending. Participants are forced to consider their own motives and choices. Using Macbeth’s speech where he lists reasons not to commit murder, Newton asks “are these reasons related to a sense of conscience—it’s wrong to kill this man—or is it more related to Macbeth’s own ego?” The power Bates has found in theatre just goes to show that its value doesn’t lie in fancy metre or archaic words, but in the vulnerability at its core.

I keep coming back to the fragility of the arts in our state education system when thinking about this. Schools are struggling increasingly to cover basic financial costs to the point where serious curriculum cuts have to be made – my school had stopped offering the drama GCSE by the time I was in year 11 and the lower school got a patchy stint of drama as one of the PHSCE rotations. When forced to choose one or the other, the formal, academic education wins time and time again. The situation is complex, but I wonder whether the enormity of what is lost is really realised. One of Clean Break’s members gives the stakes some perspective: “theatre education is about breaking down barriers, building self-confidence and giving women self-belief”. This is by no means exclusive to girls but countless women I know would benefit from breaking down barriers and having more self-confidence and self-belief. The influence of creativity seems drastically underestimated.

Theatre is hardly a magic wand that transforms lives with a wave, but it offers a lifeline. It offers a chance to explore the self in relation to the world and opens up a network of support that many haven’t ever experienced before. After all, if all the world’s a stage then no one should be denied their role.

Human nature: why we should all be getting outdoors

At the moment, I feel more grateful than ever to live where I do. My house backs on to fields meaning whichever direction I go in, I get to be surrounded by nature. These past few weeks, I have come across so many more people wandering across the fields for their daily exercise. While we all have more time on our hands, families are choosing to take time out of their day to get out of the house, and to slow down and reconnect with nature. 

Understandably, the increase in people coming to rural areas has caused a few practical issues. Some of the key issues involve people letting their dogs free around livestock without realising the damage it can cause, and the reduced ability for social distancing if people are walking down narrow country paths in close proximity to each other. However, in my opinion, any negatives of this increase use of outdoor space are outweighed by the positive impacts for physical and mental health. The increase in people wanting to be in nature shows that we all instinctively know how important nature is for our wellbeing as a species, and we rely on nature more than we might admit in a world where productivity and technology now control our lives. 

There is something so reassuring about being in nature. Having your feet firmly planted on ground which has been the same for thousands of years, seeing the seasons change as reliably as they do every year. Recently, I walked past a bomb shelter which appeared to be randomly placed in a field on the outskirts of a local village. That soil, if it could speak, would tell so many tales, both beautiful and tragic; the bomb shelter and the fields around it act as a reminder that we got through the atrocities of the world wars. 

The fact that so much time can be traced back through nature is incredibly comforting. Nature has been a constant through so much that may have felt like the end of the world. Feeling grounded and secure is somewhat of a luxury at the best of times, but in the midst of this pandemic it can feel unattainable. The sense that nature is everlasting does a lot to combat that feeling of floating without an anchor, and it reminds you that, from any situation – an essay crisis, an argument, any problem that seems insurmountable – there is a way out. It is easy to believe that the society and institutions we have constructed are the be all and end all of everything, yet nature reminds me that this isn’t the case. There are bigger things than all of this, and we should remember that our day-to-day worries, while obviously important to us, don’t have to mean everything. The constant presence of nature helps us to put things into perspective. 

As well as being comforted by the knowledge that nature has always been there, it is also lovely to see the sheep and cattle around in spring and summer every year. Not only do they remind us that summer is starting, but their presence is again reassuring; they don’t have any trivial worries, and simply live their lives. Animals, in general, allow you to take your mind away from the stresses of everyday life, and I find that they remind me to enjoy the world I live in. When I watch my dog having fun, sniffing around in curiosity and searching for new things each day, it makes me realise how interconnected all forms of life are. It is not just me who can appreciate the sights, scents and sounds of nature, but my dog can, and the livestock can too. The co-existence of animals with humans in nature shows us that all living things do belong together in some way. We are different beings and we all enjoy in nature in different ways, but the fundamental quality of nature brings happiness and adds a new dimension to life. Humans may differ from animals in terms of our higher cognitive abilities, but we too evolved out of nature and are, as a result, still intrinsically connected to it. 

The importance of our connection to nature may seem like a subjective, personal belief, but that is not the case. The University of Derby analysed over 50 studies and found that people who are more connected with nature have “greater eudaimonic well-being…and in particular have higher levels of self-reported personal growth.” Being stuck inside all day, it can feel like our lives are stagnant and that there is no way to better the situation. It can be so refreshing just to get outside and have a change of scenery. Just because we have to have our classes and tutorials in the same room all the time now, it doesn’t mean we have to be stuck in that room for the entire day. Having the ability to be so close to nature is a luxury that I really appreciate, but wherever you are, the importance of stepping away from concrete walls and into a bit of fresh air is obvious. Nature is not just pretty, but it provides a form of restoration, something which we all need from time to time.

The best podcasts to banish boredom

So, you’ve baked the perfect banana bread, binged Tiger King, considered giving yourself a fringe à la Normal People’s Marianne, or buying a chain like Normal People’s Connell – then talked yourself out of both – what next? Whether you’re getting your work done (despite nothing having changed in your environment, I promise term has started) and need something to listen to or you need another excuse to procrastinate, there’ll be a podcast for you.

If lockdown has ruined your plans, How to Fail with Elizabeth Day is the one for you. Elizabeth Day interviews celebrities about three failures of their choice. From Love Island stars to Phoebe Waller-Bridge to James O’Brien to Gina Miller to Jamie Laing, Day’s sensitivity as an interviewer encourages us to eventually reconsider our definitions of failure. Dylan Marron’s Conversations with People Who Hate Me, Grounded with Louis Theroux and David Tennant Does a Podcast With… all have similar discussion-based formats with nuance and wit. It’s like going for coffee with a very eclectic group of interesting people.

If you prefer the investigative leaning of Serial or Bear Brook, but with a bit less murder, then try The Dream. The first season explores the world of MLMs (#girlbosses, overpriced leggings, and dodgy diet drinks) while the second looks at the risks of aspirational wellness through the lens of capitalist commodification. It’s artfully produced – full of suspense and utterly bingeable, but with a quality of research that will make you want to return. Gangster Capitalism is currently looking at the NRA’s internal conflict. Stuff They Don’t Want You to Know also has an impressive range of subject areas – covering UFO sightings, mysterious unsolved cases (including, yes, a few murders), and 2016’s clown panic.

Do you fancy sounding incredibly well-informed about current events? Today in Focus, hosted by Anushka Asthana, combines a narrative of the news with insightful analysis. Released every weekday, it’s a quick listen with a great outcome: you get educated fast. The Economist has a whole host of podcasts that delve into the big questions of each day. BBC Radio 4’s Today in Parliament has a similar focus with a more overtly political flair. If you prefer interviews, then The Political Party, hosted by Matt Forde, is a look at politicians as you’ve never seen them before. With more expert input, The President’s Inbox is a dream for anyone interested in foreign relations and economics.

For pure enjoyment, Welcome to Night Vale is a cult classic. The premise is simple – it’s the radio station of a small desert town. The twist? This town is its own Lovecraftian, bizarre world with glow clouds raining meat, a multi-dimensional dog park, and invisible pie. Come for the mysterious hooded figures and Secret Police already listening at your window, stay for a faceless old woman (who secretly lives in your home), and Carlos the Scientist’s perfect hair. Welcome to Night Vale has become hugely popular, with sold-out world tours and best-selling books. If you’re already a fan, Kakos Industries has just as much weirdness with a whole lot more evil. While the podcasting stereotype of white men with glasses and plaid shirts can seem discouraging, Edison Research found that, out of all mediums, podcasts were, in fact, the most diverse and the one “that best represents the ethnic and gender make-up” of America due to its low set-up costs. And if you can’t find a podcast you like, then why not set up your own? – like Oxford’s own Maybe You Like It Podcast, where guests discuss staging unlikely media like Hot Fuzz, 50 First Dates, or Ex Machina. In a time with limited socialisation, new voices are always welcome, whether you’re listening or speaking up.

Why we should view the #foxeyes trend with narrowed eyes

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Bella Hadid. Kendall Jenner. Two of the most renowned names, and faces, in the fashion world. Despite their natural beauty, both supermodels are alleged to have undergone surgical blepharoplasty or lift procedures to raise the outer corners of their eyes, stretch the skin up towards their temples, and narrow their gaze to fashion a kind of slanted squint. This trend, referred to on Instagram and TikTok as #foxeyes, has inspired thousands of makeup fans to recreate the look by shaving off half their eyebrow, redrawing it at a steeper angle and using makeup to create the appearance of slanted eyes. There’s also the ‘strained eye’ or ‘migraine pose’, involving placing one’s hand by the temple and stretching the eye outwards. I’m sure that you, like me, hadn’t really thought anything of it. Indeed, I’m even partial to the old ‘migraine pose’ myself. It’s just a beauty trend, right? But there does seem to be something amiss. How is it that supermodels can make narrow, slanted ‘fox eyes’ fashionable and desirable in western culture, when for decades Asian people have suffered racial abuse for theirs?

Of course, the fox eyes trend is no direct attempt to emulate Asian eyes. Could it be that, by bringing a ‘look’ similar to that of Asian eyes to the forefront of western beauty standards, these high-profile figures are actually encouraging the western world to see the slanted, narrow eye shape of Asian people as appealing? This is certainly a nice prospect; one which could give a great deal of confidence to young Asians worried about looking different. I remember myself aged just nine or ten, being told by one of my primary school friends that she and her mum thought my ‘almond-shaped eyes’ were ‘beautiful’. It was the first time I’d ever been told anything like that, having got used to being taunted by other kids – and that tender comment has stuck with me to this day.

However, here’s where we start to run into problems. The physical acts behind the fox eyes trend and ‘strained eye’ pose, of drawing the corner of one’s eye outwards, recall to a concerning extent the racial abuse that Asian immigrants to the west have faced because of the shape of their eyes. My own family experience is just one example of an entire demographic that has been subjected to the racist mocking of Asian eyes. My mum, having grown up in Leeds in the 60s and 70s as the daughter of Mongolian immigrants, regularly encountered the old pulling of eyes into slits. Even me and my brother – decades later, and with 50% non-Asian DNA – have suffered the same treatment. In 2014 in Austria a group of boorish youths walked past my mum and brother, shouting abuse in German and pulling their eyes upwards. Last year my brother went to the Man United v Newcastle game at Old Trafford where he was jeered at by a group of Geordies, also finding the corners of their eyes in sudden need of a massage. But the point is: even today, in 2020, having slanted eyes is still the butt of racist jibes; yet it’s somehow become acceptable and even sexy in western culture to narrow, pull and elongate your eyes to create the same effect.

Like all beauty trends, #foxeyes will go out of fashion, and soon wide-open dinner-plate eyes will be the next big thing. But Asian eyes are not just a trend. And we, unlike billionaire supermodels, can’t just change the shape of our eyes with a surgical intervention, knowing that society will latch onto it as a beauty statement. Indeed, it’s a welcome change to see slanted eyes being spotlighted as beautiful, but I have serious doubts about whether Bella Hadid would be heckled by people pulling their eyes into slits if she walked into Old Trafford. While there’s nothing inherently wrong or bigoted about #foxeyes, it’s precisely our society’s narrow field of vision that leads us into obfuscating this real-life problem beneath the glossy façade of a popular beauty trend.

Isolation Hustles – How lockdown has affected student mini-businesses

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The coronavirus crisis has stopped the global economy in its tracks. Each week, yet more gloomy headlines appear: this week, a BBC headline proclaimed that the UK was on track for the deepest downturn in living memory. For students, the pandemic could have particularly painful consequences. Research by the Institute of Student Employers suggests that 27% of recruiters will be recruiting fewer graduates as a consequence of the crisis. At the same time, student fees will remain fixed, even if courses have to move entirely online in autumn. In this climate, the age-old student side-hustle is cast in a new light.  Whether it be tutoring, running a re-sale store or selling art online, could these opportunities to earn a few extra pennies become a vital lifeline for the student community in hard times?

At first glance, the lockdown has done little to affect many of the most common student side-hustles. The ‘side-hustle’, as defined by the Cambridge English Dictionary, is “a piece of work or a job that you get paid for doing in addition to doing your main job”,  but can often carry entrepreneurial overtones. For students, this often translates to taking on tutoring jobs, taing commissions on art, or selling on online platforms. Thanks to modern technology, tutoring is going ahead via Zoom, Skype or Microsoft Teams: meanwhile Depop, Ebay, and Etsy have been online marketplaces, and for the most part quarantine-proof since their inception. 

Not only are these industries surviving the pandemic, there is evidence to suggest they are thriving. The Financial Times reported that online tutoring was experiencing a worldwide boom in demand due to coronavirus restrictions. Meanwhile, the trade journal Business of Fashion has reported a boom in the re-sale sector. Unscientific though my personal testimony is, I have noticed an upswing in interest in my own casual Depop store, which has seen a sudden surge in activity.

That isn’t to say that the pandemic hasn’t brought challenges for the side-hustle. Oxford friends who regularly tutor online have given me a mixed-bag of opinions: one says the government’s decision to cancel exams has decreased demand for his tutoring services. However, another states: “some parents appreciate knowing that it’s a service which guarantees their kids will be learning rather than leaving it to working on Teams”. Just as this pandemic is especially accelerating the demise of companies that were already struggling before, an isolation ‘boost’ to online services cannot take away the problems that previously existed on those platforms. Depop UK’s marketing strapline is ‘Make Your Empire Now’, but it’s clear that true business empires are not going to be achievable for many, if not most, of the platform’s 18 million users. Meanwhile, online commissions platforms such as Fiverr have been accused of exploitation. Up until 2013, the platform had a controversial $5 base price- although this was then lifted, and sellers can now set their own base price for their services.

Indeed, conversations with student artists, who often sell their existing artworks, or accept commissions, have revealed a similarly bittersweet picture for the pandemic ‘side-hustle.’  The situation has had its challenges for both Georgia Crowther and Deshna Shah, fine art finalists at Lady Margaret Hall and Magdalen College, respectively, although both have responded to the lockdown with impressive new initiatives. Deshna has started a new business, This Era Art, which is designed to represent and raise awareness of underrepresented artists, such as female, LGBTQ+ and BAME artists, especially when trying to break into the industry. The website offers people the opportunity to learn about emerging artists, as well as to view and purchase their art online. Whilst the lockdown has been challenging, the website has allowed her and other artists to sell their work online despite the pandemic.  It has also been important for Deshna on an emotional level: “I decided to start my business and support other artists because I myself am struggling to create art. At home I care for my elderly grandfather who is visually impaired so creating this platform for others in between caring for him allows me to feel positive”. Georgia Crowther has also made some adaptations to her work style due to the lockdown.  In the past year she has done a number of exciting collaborations with street artist REQ, including a work inside SeaLife Brighton, and a mural on the side of a house. This kind of work has stopped because of social distancing, but Georgia tells me “As a multidisciplinary and social artist, adaptation is intrinsic. I always respond to my current environment. While business isn’t in the same form, what I have been granted with fortunate security by staying with my family is time to step back, cultivate ideas and reflect on my digital documentation of my work.”

Georgia’s mention of being fortunate is important, since in many ways it can feel like the ‘side-hustle’ is the preserve of the privileged. Side-hustles, especially re-sale, often involve more risk and less financial renumeration than jobs such as bar work or retail, which have been wiped out by coronavirus restrictions. Not everyone has the spare cash to buy stock and re-sell even in the best of times, let alone in a global pandemic. There’s a case, too, that the popularity of side-hustles amongst younger generations – millennials are sometimes nicknamed ‘The Side-Hustle Generation’- plays into a damaging obsession with constant productivity. I ask Georgia and Deshna what they think about this. They both agree- “I think the most important thing in any situation is someone’s emotional and physical health. During the crisis, these are under heightened pressure, therefore to just eat well and sleep well is productive at the moment. Productivity has no fixed definition,” explains Georgia.

Georgia and Deshna’s passion for their art really shines through in the interviews they gave me, and it’s a testament to the fact that a side-hustle can mean many different things to many different people. For some, their side-hustle is their real passion, whilst their day job is something they do for the money.  For others, it’s the reverse. What a lot of side-hustles have in common is that they can be continued online, and so have adapted well to the current situation. But whether they will be a lifeline for a lot of students depends on each of our circumstances. And as Deshna puts it: “There is a lot of pressure to come out of this crazy situation as a highly productive, positive and goal-achieving person. In reality, we are all just trying to get by. Enjoy the things that make you happy – for me that is art, my family and my health.”

Do LGBT+ creatives have a responsibility to produce queer art?

Whether as a cathartic enterprise, a desperate attempt to express that which is screaming loudly inside, or a very crafted masterpiece, art makes the intangible tangible. In its process of creation, in the evocative realisation of that dream, desire or idea, the artist’s identity leaves a mark. It’s inevitable. Nothing could transcend the realm of the intangible without being shaped by the artist’s hand or mind. So, when asked if people have to “use” their identity in art, I couldn’t help but say “I don’t think they can help it. Not with art.”

There are, of course, many layers to the question of artistic creation. While there is an inherent presence of the artist’s identity in the finished “product”, the explicit desire for it to reflect one’s own narrative or experience seems to be more contentious – especially when it comes to queer artists and the hypothetical pressure of including themes about gender and sexuality in the artistic creation.

Having grown up being absolutely bombarded by representations of heteronormative relationships, narratives that depicted very specific understandings of “acceptable” gender norms, I would have never thought gender and sexuality were something solely queer artists touched upon. As was very eloquently put by Céline Sciamma in her Screenwriters Lecture at the BAFTAs in 2019, the process of artistic creation is one that derives from, and is shaped by, our desires. She spoke of her writing process and the absolute necessity of loving the creation of a scene, of desiring it.

That strong feeling of desire, of needing and wanting to create something, is present in our everyday interactions with the world. Whether it’s catching up with a friend, stopping to pick up a flower on a walk, or deciding what book or show to watch next, our identity is shaped by the decisions we make, by the desires we have and our management of them. With something as strong as that guiding our movements, setting the rhythm of that which we call life, how could it not be present in art? How could it not be involved, how could it not guide, the intangible towards the tangible, when it guides everything else?

When two characters fall in love, the way in which they do so, the narrative they create and belong to is inherently something which derives from the artist’s experience – that’s fairly straightforward. But the question of how that experience is transcended onto the page, the actual process that enables the creation of a scene, its characters, and of the realisation of that artist’s desire, is slightly more complex.

Understanding our emotions is something everyone struggles with: if not always, then at least at some point in their lives. How we manage our emotions, in relation to others, is also often a herculean task. While the desires of others at times conflate with ours, we find ourselves needing to take them into account if anything fruitful is to derive from our relations. The way we often conquer these fears and the way we manage to make sense of it all, and act on our emotions accordingly, is often through our learned experiences. Through behavioural patterns we observe, judge, and pick up. We look at the examples in our lives: of people, fictional or otherwise, seemingly exhibiting similar struggles to ours. In a sense, art creates a language that enables us to better understand and explore the most intangible, yet absolutely crucial, aspects of our lives. We seek comfort in it – guidance, answers, reassurance that we are not alone.

But what happens when that art doesn’t seem to reflect your experiences? When your desires and your attractions seem to differ from the narratives on the screen, countless stories written across pages. Or when your gaze, the way you look upon the world and its people, differs from that imprinted on photographs, sculptures, and paintings? That element of comfort and understanding, that explanatory language, disappears. Or, worse even, makes itself at home in your brain, urging you to “adapt”, to “follow the norm.” You push aside all feelings or desires that conflate with what is expected of you, and has been, since birth.

Lack of representation of queer narratives in art and the cis-heteronormalizing of queer art hinders humanity’s understanding of the multifaceted nature of desire, identity, sexuality, and in an encompassing way, of human experience. No one except the archaic structures of power and authority, the daemons that keep us up tonight and spew hatred, benefit from it.

Much debate has currently arisen from increasing queer representation in the arts, particularly on the screen. Some internet users seem adamant for this to “stop”, see “no point in it”, and the ever-present argument of “children shouldn’t be exposed to this” is as strong as ever. The fear, of course, that by being able to experience them, they will have a “greater chance of becoming queer.” It baffles me that this idea pervades. Having grown up watching nothing but the straightest of narratives (Disney Channel I’m looking at you), reading the most cis-heteronormative of stories, and being “protected” from anything that resembled queerness did not manage to make me straight. Nothing could be further from the truth.

What it did, however, was lead to an incessant desire to read characters through queer lenses. To go on about how much Horatio and Hamlet loved each other in English class. To absolutely adore Nymphadora Tonks’ shape-shifting abilities. To salute anything and anyone that defied gender norms. Even at a very young age, I decided I’d dress up as a knight for my classmate’s birthday parties, ever hoping I could run away with my best friend at the time, the most incredible princess in my eyes. I wasn’t trying to make any sort of statement; I was merely trying to speak my truth.

I was, in every decision I made, acting on my desires and managing my emotions, all the while feeling increasingly conflated about why people stared at me, or why my parents would take me aside and explain that that was the last time I would be allowed to wear the costume, and would be wearing the dress instead. Apparently, I ought to wear make up more often, because boys found that attractive, as opposed to playing football with them and “being one of the lads”. I didn’t understand what me playing football had to do with liking boys, or more importantly, why everything in my life seemed to be directed at being desired by them. But I knew it should do. There were enough works in my life telling me that’s what a teenage girl should want.

No, being exposed to cis-heterosexuality did not make me less gay. It made me question my own sanity and my own desires; it made me mishandle my emotions. It made me feel ashamed, confused, uncomfortable; it made me hate myself. But it did not make me straight.

The act of representing these narratives, of ensuring people recognise these works as queer, is undoubtedly a political one. It challenges the norms that our society is ridiculously still built up on. And any form of challenge to prevalent structures of power and authority is regarded as political.

And it isn’t political just because of that. It is political because humans are, by nature, political animals. Every decision we make, every emotion we manage, every relation we establish, is a part of our nature, a part of our identity, a part of our political essence. The responsibility artists have when creating their works is political because the process of its development and reception is at its very essence human, and is thus political. If the themes of gender and sexuality are present in queer works, it is not because they are all that queerness amounts to, but rather because they are intrinsic aspects of human experience.

If queer artists have any responsibility to depict “queerness” in their work, it is merely the same responsibility as any artist does: that of creating something that enables the transcendence of the intangible to the tangible. Something that speaks of human experience, that alludes to and is driven by our desires. And while that task is made increasingly difficult due to centuries of erasure, marginalisation, oppression and denial, it surfaces in every work produced by queer artist because of the mind and hand that realise them.

Reuters Institute studying COVID-19 impact on public engagement with news

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A new research project, launched by the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, will analyse public opinion towards media coverage of COVID-19.

As part of the recently announced “COVID-19 news and information project”, the Oxford-based Reuters Institute will gather data on how the public navigates news sources during the pandemic. The research will also identify how information is distributed by governments and other key organisations.

The study began in early April and preliminary data published on 28th April stated that 37% of the UK population were happy with media coverage of the pandemic.

A second factsheet, published on 5th May, expanded on these findings and showed a clear divide in public opinion. Of those surveyed, 30% believed the media had not been critical enough of the government response, 28% that coverage had been fair, and 29% that it had been too critical.

The short report also highlights the link between political orientation and perception of news outlets, as well as public concerns about false or misleading information. The Reuters Institute will continue to distribute surveys at two-week intervals in order to gain an overview of changing opinions and consumption habits.

The COVID-19 news and information project serves as a timely addition to existing research on attitudes toward the media. Last month the Reuters Institute announced the launch of the Trust in News Project. A $4million grant from the Facebook Journalism Project was secured earlier this year which will fund the independent research project.

The research will focus on trust in the context of digital news and look at trends in Brazil, India, the United Kingdom, and the United States.

Rasmus Kleis Nielsen, Director of the Reuters Institute, said: “The Trust in News Project is a unique new effort to understand the drivers of trust around news… and help identify actionable, evidence-based recommendations for how to demonstrate trustworthiness and build trust with different communities in different contexts.”

More information about the COVID-19 news and information project can be found here.

Image Credit to CogSciLibrarian/ Wikimedia Commons

The scope for creativity in quarantine

One thing I am glad of, in returning home, is that there is no need to feel trapped. My father’s house looks from one hill to another, over the valley of my hometown which nestles itself comfortably in the Pennines. I have attempted to create in my college room before; a process that left so many loose threads, and I mean this literally, around my room that it perhaps could have been interpreted as a spider-inspired performance piece. Reflecting on this now seems very cramped compared to such a perspective over the Yorkshire countryside. However, my college room is generally reserved for sleeping, with my creativity being rooted in the white walls and grey floors of the studio. I have not created in a space that resembled a home since I was 16, truthfully. Most of the places I have called my studio have borne striking similarities with each other, and I wouldn’t hesitate to say most art institutions.

The luxury of having a sofa again is certainly something that inhibited the desire for creativity over the holiday. However, with the term commencing, the necessity to start creating again has left me with a struggle to view my home as a workspace. Art spaces have cultivated the white cube mode of presentation as the standard, and while there is deviation from it, it is often a deviation that needs justification. With gallery spaces and art schools across the globe closed, we have been denied access to these spaces of artistic authority. Creativity has never been so well marketed, with institutions requiring methods of interaction that surpass the privilege of physical viewership. Digital dissemination of artwork has increased, with new online film festivals and online gallery tours abound. Because of this, interaction with contemporary art has never been so accessible. Not only this, but there has been an increase in independent creatives over the last decade, with platforms like YouTube and Instagram allowing artists to engage and cultivate an audience outside of an art market and its ingrained hierarchies.

Beyond this this interaction between digital artworks and non-physical audiences, is the question of traditional artworks – painting and sculpture – which also still require platforms for interaction. This necessitates alternate modes of display, ones that require authority from beyond that of the white cube gallery space. Questions of curatorship and the exhibition have been key concerns within artistic display since the 1960s, with biennales and the large-scale exhibition attempting to tackle traditional display. This involved more site-specificity and artworks that were created in situ. These ties between art and the place of presentation must be raised again, as opposed to emulating installation gallery shots, we should embrace the enhanced relationships between creation and presentation. Rosalind Krauss asserted that modern sculpture was nomadic, with its pedestal separating it from its immediate surroundings, thereby untethering it from the institution of its display. However, denied from formal modes of exhibition (the sculptures pedestal), art has a requirement to engage with its surroundings, rooting it in the limitations of our current situation. Emulation of the inaccessible public space is a refusal to embrace the new authority that our homes have been afforded within the art world.

The heightened interaction with the art world through digital media offers a new dispersal of artistic authority, with art institutions now engaging with the same platforms as independent artists. We are dependent on our homes and its interaction with our creative spaces, with the limitations of it defining our art objects. While this may demand streamlined approaches to our art, it does not demand a less experimental practice. Traditional methods of assignment of artistic weight upon an object are unavailable, and so the art space has expanded. Though digital media appears to hold the socially distanced exhibition, the situation of artwork beyond the camera is one that is now being offered a new sense of import. Creativity in quarantine does not necessitate a narrowing of ideas; rather allowing for artists to reclaim the authority of display. Art galleries, through the use of the white cube, have removed the human body from spectatorship. No longer a public gathering space, the gallery engages its own hierarchy and etiquette. Without traditional competition, there has never been a better opportunity for artists and curators to engage new relationships with the artist, environment and records.