This article proposes the concepts of “brutal” and “gentle” affects as a critical framework to analyze affective economies of freedom in paradoxical times. Drawing on Sara Ahmed’s work on affect, Sruti Bala’s on participation, and Franco Berardi’s on freedom, it argues that freedom emerges not solely as a historical achievement of an inalienable right, but as an embodied experience enhanced by theatrical dispositifs. I consider forms of celebrating, performing, and capturing freedom in paradoxical times, including the staging of the fiftieth anniversary of the Carnation Revolution; the production 25th of April 1974 by Portuguese company Mala Voadora; and The Seagull by Argentinian director Guillermo Cacace. I begin with a discussion of the relationship between populism and notions of freedom, describing the nuanced usage and political capture of the latter to examine its paradoxes in the present. I then examine how these productions critically engage with the paradoxes of freedom and reset the conditions of experience of its affective-sensorium.
Articles by Ana Pais
Ana Pais is an Auxiliary Researcher at ICNOVA/FCSH – NOVA University Lisbon, dramaturge, and discursive practices curator. She is currently the PI of the research project Free Will and the Will for Freedom. She is the author of Who is Afraid of Emotions? (2022), a public engagement book on the performativity of affects in the pandemic, and editor of the volume Performance in the Public Sphere (2018). Her work has also been published in Performance Research, Luso-Brazilian Review, TDR, and other journals. Her current research addresses the affective performances of contemporary far-right populism and performances that resist and defy them.