Signature Stories Vol 8 | Page 23

I found a lot of solace in the word students, you can diagnose immediately where they are in terms of grasping structure, and what they want from theatre. I think that play is amazing. But I remember everyone else being like, “I don’t get it.” At the end of the year Neal said, “I think you should keep writing plays. You’re doing something really complicated.” I found a lot of solace in the word “complicated.” That somehow it was okay to be messy, okay to wrestle in your plays with a million things. Signature: It’s true, you’re always operating on multiple levels in your work. BJJ: Right. So I applied to write a full-length play for my thesis, but I was an anthropology major. Within my anthro studies though, I was very much “complicated.” which I actually teach in my own classes today. When you teach that play to into performance studies. I took a class called “On Literature and Culture” about reading texts in order to discuss culture but also as relics of culture. It was about literature as a culturally located idea. I was obsessed with ideas of appropriation and value and race and Americanness. Signature: But you hadn’t yet written about race, or really engaged with those issues in your work, right? BJJ: Well around this time I took a class with Daphne Brooks on African American theatre. I was suddenly curious about blackness in the theatre and what that was. The first thing she said, which was very provocative, was, “There are two places I could’ve started this class. I could’ve started with minstrelsy or with Uncle Tom’s Cabin. I’m choosing Uncle Tom’s Cabin.” Her point had to do with the idea of a canon. A lot of the nar Ʌѥٔ