fragmentation
"Hi, my name is Carla. I am 27 years old and have a degree in environmental studies. I have a job. I have a boyfriend, George; we are getting married soon. I am Spanish. I am Spanish but I live in London. I am Spanish and I live in London but I work for a French company. I am Spanish, I live in London, I work for a French company but I have a Pekingese dog. I am Spanish, I live in London, I work for a French company, I have a Pekingese dog and my mother is Polish. Spaniard in London, French company, Pekingese dog, Polish mother and I eat Russian salad. There is a difference between eating Russian salad and German salad, you know? Especially as a Spaniard in London, with a French job, a Polish mother and a Pekingese dog (...)
I don’t want any of your shit. I don’t want to hear your languages, I refuse. I don’t want to talk any more. From now on I am ethereal. I am odourless, colourless, invisible and you will never see me anymore. You will never be able to catch me, as I will never partake in your nonsense or belong to any of your flags. I will never have any colour, or say or vote. I will never be what I am supposed to be. I will never belong. I will never belong and I will never be.
From this day forth, I am ceasing to be so I can continue to exist. From this day forth, the inner and outer me will disappear and become one. No more death and no more life. From this day forth, I am free. Undefinable; unclassifiable; and unnameable (...)".
Fragmentation is a monologue/solo that presents us a critic between the need of definition that our socity force us to do, and how this definition creates just division and fragmentation between people and between ourselves.
It takes the vision of Jiddu Krishnamurti and the quantic physics of David Bohm, to talk about the concept of fragmentation as a cause of unhappinest and war.
[TEAM DESCRIPTION]
Texts, direction & interpretation_ Meritxell Checa
Translation_ Marc Duckett
Language_ English
Lenght_ 00:10:00