07 07 07 theatrum posse in Heiligendamm: Rebel Clown Army, Superheroes and the Five-Finger GameTranslated by Gene Ray In the way it was first mediated, the militant scenario that opened the theatrum posse in Heiligendamm in 2007 set into stone images of the enemy. However, over the week of actions, protest and resistance became more performatively subversive in the ways the posse put its own body into play. Even if the media coverage momentarily overshadowed the contents and other forms of protest, the “Five-Finger Posse Players” prevailed on the ground. With the successful blockade tactic, which didn’t conform at all to the media hype following the demo in Rostock, the posse put into play its own poses of resistance, in acts of symbolic border crossing that go beyond the war of media images. In
Heiligendamm there was no overlooking the spectrum of carnivalesque, queer, and
theatrical practices of resistance. To a
greater degree than before, these practices interfered with police rituals of
confrontation, but also with the movement’s own rituals of struggle. In each of the three activist camps sited
around Heiligendamm, up to 5000 people from diverse countries were gathered. Organized from below into “barrios”
(neighborhoods) and assemblies of delegates and groups, they planned actions,
did media work and formed brigades to clean up and help with the cooking,
before pouring out together for demos and blockades. In the run-up, volunteers built the necessary
infrastructure for a week of communal living, and donations financed the
Peoples’ Kitchen and the Port-o-potties.
Large assemblies mainly took place in circus tents, and volunteer
“Rabbits” quickly took care of organizing, mediation, and other camp needs. The diversity of the alter-globalization
movement and its concerns was fully visible in the camps: Attac activists pitched their tents here,
next to those of autonomists, union members, leftist party members, anti-racist
and anti-sexist groupings, and migrants – in addition to the “hedonists,”[1]
who immediately on their arrival occupied a large area of a camp and provided
cool sounds during and after the activism.
In their manifestos, they called the attention of the theatrum posse
to the right to combine politics and fun.
Out of a barrio calling itself “Queers against G8”[2]
came formations of “pink” activists, samba bands and clowns. There, as well as in the “Women, Lesbian,
Transgender Barrio,” interventionist forms of performance were rehearsed. In the camps themselves an offensive was
launched to discuss gender themes and come to grips with sexist behavior. In addition to the camps, various “Another
World Is Possible” action groups organized themselves in schools and areas
provided by the city of Rostock. NGOs
like Greenpeace and Doctors Without Borders had installed themselves on boats
in the harbor, where the concert and party-boat Stubnitz was also
welcoming activists on board. Activists
from Greenpeace attempted to breach the security zone with boats and a hot air
balloon, resulting in a spectacular chase on sea and air. For their “Art Goes to Heiligendamm” project,
some artists and activists made an installation at a site on the harbor; the
so-called “Silver Pearl” accommodated lots of creative and political people who
set up places for discussion, performative practices and media work,[3]
but thereby produced an odd distance from the grassroots activists. Presentations and discussions by activists
and artists alternated with performances and film screenings. On the Internet, one could follow the events
and exchanges, or watch the locally-produced “kein.tv”[4]. Media and also a few theatrical actions
emerged there and linked up with other protest forms.
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Gin MüllerGene Ray (translation)other languagestheatrum posse in Heiligendamm: Rebel Clown Army, Superheroes and the Five-Finger Game theatrum posse in Heiligendamm: Rebel Clown Army, Superhelden und 5-Finger-Spielsysteme |