King / Carnivalesque Economies 472
Kritika Kultura 21/22 (2013/2014): –489 © Ateneo de Manila University
<http://kritikakultura.ateneo.net>
IMPASSE
Barnaby King
Edge Hill University, UK
barnaby.king@edgehill.ac.uk
Abstract
In Colombia, clowns are proliferating and thriving, particularly in the context of neoliberal
political economies prevailing since the mid-1990s. his paper explores some reasons
why this might have occurred, as well as theorizing a two-way relationship of domination
and resistance between clown practices and the current iteration of late capitalist global
economies; what I call “carnivalesque economies.” While Bakhtin described clowns as “the
constant, accredited representatives of the carnival spirit in everyday life out of carnival
season,” the Colombian case suggests that their breaching of norms and violations of taboos
are all too easily co-opted by governments, corporations, and institutions to disseminate
normative ideologies and coerce citizens. Nevertheless, these carnivalesque economies
can never fully contain or account for the potential of clown performance to rupture and
genuinely challenge neoliberal power relations. Rather than speak truth to power, clowns
and clowning may speak truth about power, or point to its carnivalesque vulnerability,
through play, through comic inversion, and through their particularly intense forms of
communication. I focus on three performance moments from my ieldwork in Colombia
in order to illustrate this argument about clowns’ ambivalent relationship to neoliberal
political economies. he irst of these is a performative intervention by clown-mimes in the
streets of Bogotá in 1995, part of the “culture of citizenship” initiatives of Mayor Antanas
Mockus; the second is a performance by “Buenavista Social Clown” that I witnessed in
2012, called “he Unknown Limit between the Public and the Private” commissioned and
funded by a state department, “La Defensoria del Espacio Público;” and the third is a clown
show produced by Clowns Without Borders (USA) and Pasos de Payasos (Colombia) in a
school in Risaralda in which the audience invaded the stage.
Keywords
Clown, Colombia, Latin America, neoliberalism
Forum Kritika: Performance and Domination
CARNIVALESQUE ECONOMIES:
CLOWNING AND THE NEOLIBERAL