
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Emily Star is the producer of the play 'The Cave of Spleen' by Laura Collins. Both Emily and Laura join Vision Australia Radio's Peter Greco to discuss the play which is a surreal work about chronic illness, female rage and climate change. Emily is a chronic ocular patient and discusses her vision journey also.
'The Cave of Spleen'
Four women meet in a cave to plan the ultimate act of environmental activism. They rage against climate change. They rage against men. They rage against each other. But a mysterious illness squeezes the anger out of their brains, one by one.
The Cave of Spleen explores the complexities of eco-feminism, female rage and chronic pain, and asks: is the expectation for women to suppress their anger the reason our bodies are crumbling into the ocean?
The Cave of Spleen radically looks at the climate crisis through the lens of disability and eco-feminism. Creating the work was an opportunity for the playwright to consider her own chronic pain and draw links to her relationship with anger as a woman.
VENUE:
Explosives Factory, Rear Laneway 67 Inkerman Street, St Kilda (behind the Thrifty-Link accessed via Lyell St and Market Street (both off Inkerman)
Learn more here: https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2023/the-cave-of-spleen
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Emily Star is the producer of the play 'The Cave of Spleen' by Laura Collins. Both Emily and Laura join Vision Australia Radio's Peter Greco to discuss the play which is a surreal work about chronic illness, female rage and climate change. Emily is a chronic ocular patient and discusses her vision journey also.
'The Cave of Spleen'
Four women meet in a cave to plan the ultimate act of environmental activism. They rage against climate change. They rage against men. They rage against each other. But a mysterious illness squeezes the anger out of their brains, one by one.
The Cave of Spleen explores the complexities of eco-feminism, female rage and chronic pain, and asks: is the expectation for women to suppress their anger the reason our bodies are crumbling into the ocean?
The Cave of Spleen radically looks at the climate crisis through the lens of disability and eco-feminism. Creating the work was an opportunity for the playwright to consider her own chronic pain and draw links to her relationship with anger as a woman.
VENUE:
Explosives Factory, Rear Laneway 67 Inkerman Street, St Kilda (behind the Thrifty-Link accessed via Lyell St and Market Street (both off Inkerman)
Learn more here: https://www.theatreworks.org.au/2023/the-cave-of-spleen
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners
0 Listeners