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The supernatural embodied text
creating Moj of the antarctic with the living and the dead
pp. 92-102
Abstract
Moj of the Antarctic: An African Odyssey is a physical storytelling theatre piece for one performer with poetry, music, dance, audience interaction and visuals.1 The play tells the odyssey of Moj, a woman who escapes slavery in the deep south of America by cross-dressing as a white man, travels to England, becomes a sailor on board a whaling ship bound for the southern ocean, and becomes the first African woman to step foot on Antarctica. The play is inspired by Ellen Craft, a mid-nineteenth-century African-American woman who in 1848 actually escaped slavery by cross-dressing as a white man.2Moj of the Antarctic is an intertextual fusion of Ellen's real life boundary-breaking trans-gender, trans-racial, trans-geographical performance with the voices of almost 20 dead authors, as well as digital images and film of myself performing as "Moj', shot on location on Antarctica by legendary Queer photographer and film-maker, Del LaGrace Volcano.
Publication details
Published in:
Broadhurst Susan, Machon Josephine (2009) Sensualities/textualities and technologies: writings of the body in 21st century performance. Dordrecht, Springer.
Pages: 92-102
Full citation:
Adebayo Mojisola (2009) „The supernatural embodied text: creating Moj of the antarctic with the living and the dead“, In: S. Broadhurst & J. Machon (eds.), Sensualities/textualities and technologies, Dordrecht, Springer, 92–102.