Revolt/Compassion gathers together six important works by Michael Springate: Historical Bliss, Dog and Crow, The Consolation of Philosophy, Freeport Texas, Kareena, and Kut: Shock and Awe. Written and produced over a twenty-five year period, they capture an expansive range of interests and influences, and reflect the artistic interdisciplinarity which has been a defining feature of his career.
I imagined a chorus which said/ that consolation is not possible,/ unless on the path of compassion,/ unless on the road of revolt -- From "The Consolation of Philosophy"
Consciously crafted, precise in their diction, and allusive in their references, the six plays comprising
Revolt/Compassion ask for the reader's collaboration. Readers are not simple receivers of pre-determined or encoded meanings; rather, they must find their way in, are encouraged to change perspective, and participate in the interpretation of the text … Their poetry -- the considered arrangement of the words, the shape of the text on the page, the accretion of meaning across the play, its solicitation of the reader's increased awareness -- activates the senses without necessarily dictating where they should take me or what I should make of them. At the same time, the ideas unfolded require a different vantage, a theoretical engagement. How can we locate ourselves in history? Where do art and politics intersect? What can words convey? How does social change come about? What part of memory and ideology is imagination? Revolt and compassion -- are these stances in contradiction with each other, or a contradiction with which to begin?
From the introduction by Dr. Erin Hurley, McGill University
Frightening in its honesty, timely in its observations... Michael Springate’s unflinching picture of Western imperialism will leave you breathless.
Charles R. Lawson, Prof. Emer. at American University (on The Beautiful West and the Beloved of God ).