The general consensus is that change is urgent. Yet those claiming to work toward that end choose illusory paths that serve more as an impediment to the change they profess to seek. It is a closed loop -- a path that follows itself -- a safe at home tour rather than an expedition in search of wherever.
My plays attempt to untangle the complex knots created by repeated trips to nowhere by focusing on the fearful simplicity of uncontaminated life where acceptance and rejection meet to hash out what's bothering them.
The US invaded Afghanistan in 2001 and Iraq a couple years later. Both were expected to be walk-over wars for the most powerful country in the world. Instead, in 2004 both easy victories had blown up in the invader's faces. The people we were trying to subdue showed remarkable ingenuity and tenacity. Heavy American casualties were making the already unpopular wars objects of extreme national divisiveness. In addition, our rulers feared that the humiliating experience of not being able to silence guerrilla uprisings against the invasions made the nation look like a crippled giant to the rest of the world. Just at that time of peak concern by our rulers, Patrick Tillman, the NFL player who cast aside the game and millions out of patriotic fervor following 9/11, was about to be discharged from the army. During his three years in both countries he came to understand that both invasions were crimes. He had corresponded with Noam Chomsky, America's foremost dissident, and they planned to meet when he was out to discuss ways they could work together against the wars. The famous football player and veteran, and the famous dissident traveling the country speaking against the wars just when the wars were at their bleakest state was not something our rulers could accept. All physical evidence was destroyed, there were five plus phony investigations, there was a congressional investigation in which all those involved with the military could remember nothing. Everyone knows what happened to Tillman – he was assassinated – murdered by the nation he mistakenly chose to serve. Americans choose to turn away from such searching truths because they demand a response concerning the real nature of the country within which they live, and that generates a silencing fear. In this short play Rick's interactions and conversations with his squad may recount some of what Tillman would have said had his country given him the chance to say them.
Título : Band of Brooders Presents The Death of Corporal Tillman
EAN : 9781311485762
Editorial : Jim Pangrazio
El libro electrónico Band of Brooders Presents The Death of Corporal Tillman está en formato ePub
¿Quieres leer en un eReader de otra marca? Sigue nuestra guía.
Puede que no esté disponible para la venta en tu país, sino sólo para la venta desde una cuenta en Francia.
Si la redirección no se produce automáticamente, haz clic en este enlace.
Conectarme
Mi cuenta