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Mary Reid Kelley: "You Make Me Iliad" | Art21 "Extended Play"

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    [Mary Reid Kelley: "You Make Me Iliad"]
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    [You]
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    [Make]
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    [Me]
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    [Iliad]
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    Stamped Monday,
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    the Doctor’s bill of health--
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    Unless the Hippocratic Oaf himself
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    left a blemish on my record, I'm clean.
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    Good line!
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    Iʼll put that in the second scene,
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    along the fortress ramparts.
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    Herr Lieutenant, Mach Schnell,
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    you only have 10 minutes?
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    Your flesh is not of interest.
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    I audition characters to boost my composition.
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    The verse needs local flavor to be edible,
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    and as a tragic female, you are most credible.
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    I've always been very interested in the history
    of women--
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    what women are doing, what the circumstances
    of their lives are,
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    how law and politics make women's lives what
    they are historically.
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    When I started researching "You Make Me Iliad,"
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    I had looked at what women were doing
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    at different points in the first World War--
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    like a nurse,
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    a factory worker--
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    and then I knew I wanted to do a prostitute--
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    a sex worker--
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    but the information is so scarce.
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    When I was trying to construct the narrative
    of this woman,
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    at first, I was trying to make it more about
    her
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    and imagining what would happen to her.
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    But I felt like I didn't want to fictionalize
    something
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    that was so completely lost to history.
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    And so rather than doing that,
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    I put her in these bookends of these male
    characters
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    that provide what information we do have about
    these women,
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    and that was the medical officer and the soldiers
    that visited them
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    and wrote about them
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    and let us know that they were there at all.
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    I learned the Classics at my Father's Knee.
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    [hymen karate fest!]
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    He put verses in my mouth,
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    which I’d mangle.
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    [fret thy namesake!]
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    A forgetful, and a frigid prodigy,
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    [my frank aesthete!]
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    unable to express my Sturm and Drangle...
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    --Trauma, as experienced by women,
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    is often cut off quite deliberately from artistic
    expression or artistic experience.
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    [I'll take my six percent saline solution,]
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    [and flush away the Species most invasive,]
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    --Many men who did all kinds of work during
    the first World War
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    would have written poetry--
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    they would have written a memoir.
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    Women just didn't have those kinds of opportunities
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    to process what had happened to them,
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    so they couldn't put the trauma anywhere other
    than
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    into the deep dark recess of history.
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    In terms of what my role is in it,
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    it's almost the only way that you can reconstitute
    that experience that is so lost
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    is through art, is through imagination.
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    Do you recall my home?
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    It was en route.
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    Your army sacked it as I bawled my eyes out--
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    quite helplessly--but in this setting
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    I'm Alpha Female, and I'm Alpha Betting
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    That you can author, but can’t spell, disaster.
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    You're slow to learn, which makes the clean
    up faster.
Title:
Mary Reid Kelley: "You Make Me Iliad" | Art21 "Extended Play"
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
Art21
Project:
"Extended Play" series
Duration:
03:53

English subtitles

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