ABSTRACTS der Vorlesungsreihe Südosteuropastudien IV: Musik, Theater, Kultur
Suzana Milevska (Skopje)
The lack and its “supplement”: The intersection of nation and gender in public space through the magnifying glass of a feminist
I want to address different invariants, loops, gridlocks and dead ends of representation of different genders and sexualities in the public spaces in post-socialist transitional societies. My questions will address the intersectionality and deadlocks – how the outburst of recent nationalism, poverty, right-wing politics and racism in post-socialist societies affected the representation of women in public space under the gust of rampant neo-liberalism. The main aim of this lecture is to address and deconstruct the intersection of nation, gender and race in the realms of symbolic, imaginary and “real” when discussing memorials, monuments and other sculptures in the public spaces in southeast Europe.
The focus will be put on the imbalance between male and female figures which dominates the public spaces and on the way how visual representation constructs, reinforces and perpetuates a visual culture and public space dominated by masculinity, aggression, violence and militant tropes. I will offer an analysis of what is lacking (or erased, emptied out, renamed) through the magnifying glass of feminism. The obvious strategy of leaving out the visual representations of the woman’s societal role from public spaces and what is used as a “supplement”: the, pregnant or objectified and eroticized representations of women will enable me to bring in the analysis of the notion of patriarchy as a prevailing phenomenon in visual culture. I will particularly refer to the case study of the recently built monumental and public sculptures in the context of the governmental urban project “Skopje 2014” (in Skopje, the capital of Macedonia). The attempt to re-write history through rapid transformations of the urban and architectural design in the main city square and other public spaces and thus to compensate for the incomplete, faulty, national identity in the state that is itself treated as “rogue” (taking into account the “name issue”) resulted with an official representation of women’s societal role (suggested by this monumental governmental project) that is stereotypical and subsumed under the rubric of subordinated and passive receptacle.