"Dramatic texts are written to be performed, and therefore do not rely solely on dialogue to produce meaning." Discuss this statement with reference to No Sugar.

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“Dramatic texts are written to be performed, and therefore do not rely solely on dialogue to produce meaning.”

Discuss this statement with reference to No Sugar.

Jack Davis’ No Sugar is a prime example of a play that does not rely solely on dialogue to produce meaning. Through dramatic conventions, Davis is able to provide an insight of the suffering, oppression and marginalisation endured by the Aboriginal people in the post-colonial Australian society. The play focuses on the political dislocation of the Millimurra family, to a reserve in Moore River, as a government attempt of ‘protection’. Without relying on dialogue, an effective amalgamation of dramatic devices, including staging, lighting, costume and sound, expose the disastrous effects of colonisation which resulted in the segregation and oppression of the Aboriginal population and the attempted annihilation of their culture.

The staging of No Sugar is an effective technique to produce meaning, other than dialogue. The stage design is divided into two sections. One section of the stage holds “the Avon Valley of Northam” where the police station and the Government Well Aboriginal Reserve are situated. On the other side of the stage “is the Moore River Native Settlement” which is where the Superintendent’s office and the Millimurra tent is set. The space on stage works well to show power relations between the two cultures in the post colonial context. The white authority held obvious positions of power, such as the Chief Protector’s Office, which works to segregate the Aboriginal people. On stage, the areas of white authority and dominance are placed on the margins of the stage. It is in these places that the Millimurra family is restricted, oppressed and marginalised. The Aboriginal encampment is situated at the forefront of the stage, thus becoming the visual focus. It is only in these areas, where white authority is not dominant, that the Millimurra family is able to celebrate their culture which was considered inferior. This privileging of the Aboriginal culture through staging is evident in both Northam and the Moore River settlement.  The division on stage also works to enhance the political dislocation of the Millimurra family from Northam to Moore River. It is through the forceful dislocation that the audience sees how the fight to own and contest the same space is the main source of conflict between the two cultures. The disempowerment of the Aboriginal people is criticised through the lack of equality in the set design. Without relying on dialogue, the staging helps to expose the power disparities of the post colonial context.

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The staging of Act One, Scene Seven helps to produce meaning by highlighting the segregation of the Aboriginal people. The use of space in the staging clearly illustrates the regulations and restrictions imposed upon the Aboriginal people, without completely relying on dialogue. In this scene, part of the action takes place in the office of “the Chief Protector of Aborigines” in Murray Street, Perth. It is this office that has an “entrance front and rear for whites and blacks respectively”. Jimmy Munday, an Aborigine character, is at the office in order to obtain a train fare back to Northam. This office ...

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