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103
Hardly Homemad(e)
his work in the city and the country taught him about the power
of its traditions of oppositional culture and the strength they
lend its public sphere.
Encounters of the Increasingly Close Kind
Bitte Liebt Österreich — erste österreichische Koalitionswoche
[Please Love Austria — First Austrian Coalition Week] was by no
means Schlingensief’s first project in Austria. That honor goes
to the play Hurra, Jesus! Ein Hochkampf [Hurray, Jesus! A Fight],
which premiered on September 30, 1995, as a co-production of
the United Stages of Graz and the Steirischer Herbst, an interna-
tional festival for contemporary art held every fall in the Styrian
capital. The Graz audience seems to have enjoyed Schlingen-
sief’s humorous attack on the Church. They invited him to back
to the Steirischer Herbst three years later to mount an Austrian
follow-up to the highly controversial Chance 2000 action he had
run in the lead-up to the German federal election of 1998.3 For
Chance 2000, Schlingensief had “founded a political party with
the aim of supporting disabled, unemployed, and other mar-
ginalized people to become independent electoral candidates”
(Forrest and Scheer 2010, 10). The medial highpoint of this ac-
tion was the invitation to go Baden im Wolfgangsee [Bathing in
Lake Wolfgang], a well-known summer holiday destination not
far from Salzburg. Schlingensief invited all six-million German
unemployed (and the number six million is not innocent in
the German context as it is the number of Jews exterminated
in the Holocaust) to join him on August 2 on the shores of the
lake in Sankt Gilgen next to Chancellor Helmut Kohl’s cottage
and to all jump in at the same time to raise the lake level and
flood said cottage (“Chance 2000 – Partei der letzten Chance
3 That he had in the intervening three years scored major hits with Rocky
Dutschke, ’68 (1996), Mein Filz, mein Fett, mein Hase! [My Felt, My Fat, My
Hare!] (1997), Passion Impossible: 7 Tage Notruf für Deutschland [Passion
Impossible: 7 Day Emergency Call for Germany] (1997), and the television
program Talk 2000, as well as a score of theater productions speaks to
Schlingensief’s extraordinary productivity.
Siting Futurity
The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Titel
- Siting Futurity
- Untertitel
- The “Feel Good” Tactical Radicalism of Contemporary Culture in and around Vienna
- Autor
- Susan Ingram
- Verlag
- punctumbooks
- Ort
- New York
- Datum
- 2021
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-953035-48-6
- Abmessungen
- 12.6 x 20.2 cm
- Seiten
- 224
- Schlagwörter
- activism, Austria, contemporary art, contemporary theater, protest culture, radicalism, social protest, Vienna
- Kategorie
- Geographie, Land und Leute
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Preface 11
- Introduction 19
- 1. (Re)Forming Vienna’s Culture of Resistance: The Proletenpassions @ #Arena 39
- 2. Converting Kebab and Currency into Community on Planet #Ottakring 57
- 3. Lazarus’s Necropolitical Afterlife at Vienna’s #Volkstheater 81
- 4. Hardly Homemad(e): #Schlingensief’s Container 101
- 5. From Grand Hotels to Tiny Treasures: Wes Anderson and the Ruin Porn Worlds of Yesterday 119
- 6. Capitalism, Schizophrenia, and #Vanlife: The Alpine Edukation of Hans Weingarter 143
- 7. #Hallstatt: Welcome to Jurassic World 161
- Bibliography 189
- Filmography 215