Edith Podesta & Tan Liting: When Bitch Meets Butch | Peatix tag:peatix.com,2011:1 2021-11-15T08:02:38+08:00 Peatix M1 Singapore Fringe Festival Edith Podesta & Tan Liting: When Bitch Meets Butch tag:peatix.com,2016:event-110730 2016-01-23T13:00:00SGT 2016-01-23T13:00:00SGT Thanks for the fantastic response! We can't add additional tickets but please register your interest via the waiting list at goo.gl/forms/SbiwMmi9HI so we can contact you if any tickets get freed up. Do check out the full Festival line up at www.singaporefringe.com and join us on at www.facebook.com/m1sff ! #M1SFF“There’s something sensational about cursing. That thinning of the lips before we launch our invective, the pleasing reduction in stress from each obscenity and the bonding with others by transgressing normal social rules."But our curses all have unique markers that leave indentations through history, little smudge marks that show how they formed into the words we loved today.”—Amy Gray, The King’s TribuneWe are proud to bring together two exciting female theatre makers Edith Podesta and Tan Liting to discuss two particular words—“Bitch” and “Butch”—both words reclaimed from their origins as derogatory slurs used on women seen to be playing outside of society’s rules.Bitches and butches may share similar traits which would be deemed as positive in a cis-gendered male—of being ambitious, aggressive, confident, demanding, smart, sexual, etc. However, women who display the above characteristics are labelled as ugly, unnatural, even bestial.Instead of shying away from these insults used to discredit the identity and experience of women who transgress societal norms, join Edith and Liting as we unpack their experiences of being Singapore-based female theatre-makers creating works about what it means to own, perform or reject these labels.From the 2016 Fringe will be Edith, with BITCH: The Origin of the Female Species. In the lead-up to the 2017 Fringe: Art & Skin, Liting will be sharing about B*TCH, a work she has been developing under Centre 42’s Boiler Room programme. B*TCH delves into the realms of feminine masculinity in an attempt to provide a glimpse into the private lives of women who relate to or identify as butch, and aims to question the positions of those who are not bound by binaries.This talk is supported by Centre 42 and will be moderated by Sean Tobin, Artistic Director of M1 Singapore Fringe Festival.Visit us at www.singaporefringe.com Updates tag:peatix.com,2015-10-26 14:41:08 2015-10-26 14:41:08 The event description was updated. Diff#126154 Updates tag:peatix.com,2015-10-26 14:40:56 2015-10-26 14:40:56 The event description was updated. Diff#126153 Updates tag:peatix.com,2015-10-26 14:40:12 2015-10-26 14:40:12 The event description was updated. Diff#126152