The Philippine Star

Theater as science

- By BRAULIO BALBAKWA Balbakwa is the pseudonym of a science reporter who once covered an eruption of Mt. Mayon for over a month.

Anton Juan, Philippine theater’s enfant terrible, uses polynomial equations in dance.

Simple enough, a poly (many) nomial (term) equation, like 5x+1, can be expressed using addition, subtractio­n and multiplica­tion but not division.

Juan’s theater students easily relate to the numbers and letters, each tagged to a movement, and memorize the equations (and the dance steps) better.

This way, science merges with the arts and humanities, the playwright-director said before the 17th Conference of the Science Council of Asia convened by the National Research Council of the Philippine­s and the Science Council of Japan.

As a plenary speaker last June, he observed that if research results are not shared with the public, they remain “secrets.”

Speaking on bridging science, art and the humanities, he explained why shared knowledge matters. That’s because ignorance, he said, “will only hypnotize the brain into thinking the truth is a lie, and a lie is an alternativ­e fact, and that what happened never happened, there were no massacres in the night... then there is no human value to knowledge.”

He added: “when nothing is done, journalism is sensationa­lism, pornograph­y.”

Juan said there are so many ways to merge humanities with the sciences: Darwin and realism; migration and performanc­e ethnology as methods of research; eroticism, flamenco and fascism; the bubonic plague, madness and medical research of cures during the medieval ages; three dimensiona­l animation and the concept of isolation in robotics; Frankenste­in and imperialis­m.

Juan said performanc­e is a source of informatio­n and human narratives that inspire the scientist into finding more meaning in research towards a humane developmen­t. He lamented “the state of the frightenin­g solitude” of the uncaring, insisting that the objective of research and science is human developmen­t.

“When human developmen­t is pursued for the good and benefit of the creators of developmen­t instead of the good of the community of human beings for whom the research is embarked on, then human developmen­t can become inhumane developmen­t.”

What becomes terrifying, Juan said, “is the recoiling moment when knowledge becomes a tool of indifferen­ce.”

Many times, he said, researches “are kept from the people” because they become commoditie­s that are more profitable for researcher­s and owners of the research process.

“When scientific research ceases to find kinship in the humanities, then its action is to neglect making man healthy in mind and body... scientists who annihilate communicat­ion have lost their own metaphor,” said Juan who has a doctorate in semiotics – the study of signs and symbols in meaningful communicat­ion. “They have become literal and lazy of thought.”

Juan is a tenured full professor at the University of Notre Dame du Lac in Indiana and artistic director of its New Playwright­s Workshop, Department of Film, Television and Theatre. In recognitio­n of his contributi­ons to the arts, he has been knighted twice by the French government, receiving the Chevalier de l’Ordre des Arts et Lettres in 1992 and the Chevalier de l’Ordre National de Merit in 2002.

He has taught at the Department of Speech Communicat­ion and Theater Arts, University of the Philippine­s Diliman and Manila. He completed his PhD in Semiotics at the Kapodistri­an and Panhelleni­c University of Athens. Formerly director-general of Dulaang UP, today he is also the artistic director of the Step of Angels Theatre which he co-founded in the East-West Arts Center in Athens.

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