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Jay Bernard: Joint

FuelFest

A person moves through a dark space, they are lit by a red light so that you can't see them as much as just a red figure moving through the space.

Weaving together personal experience, social history and real life cases, Joint is a powerful, multi-media account of Joint Enterprise law by one of Britain's most exciting poets.

“I didn’t know that by sitting in the kitchen I’d be hunted down, arrested, convicted, on the same charges as him. And you’d be too.”

Joint Enterprise is a controversial common law doctrine where an individual can be jointly convicted of the crime of another if it can be proven that they foresaw the crime taking place.

Increasingly challenged, it is part of a history of collective punishment that systematically targets racialised and working class people that can be traced from colonialism through to today. But how does it work? And how can it be defeated?

Jay Bernard is a writer and artist whose works include Surge, The Red and Yellow Nothing and English Breakfast. They are the winner of the Ted Hughes Award and the Sunday Times Young Writer Award.

This is a work-in-progress performance as part of FuelFest, celebrating 20 years of fresh work for adventurous people by inspiring artists.

Running time: Approximately 60-70 minutes, no interval

Age guidance: 12+

This event contains strong language and themes of violence.

Post-show talk
Tue 18 Mar, following the 7.45pm performance. Free to same-day ticket holders.

 

Directed by Jo Tyabji.

Commissioned and produced by Fuel.

Presented by the Barbican. 

Discover more about Fuel on their website fueltheatre.com and across socials on @fueltheatre. 

This is a Pay What You Can event. Simply choose the price closest to what you would like to pay during the the checkout. 

The price options are: £5, £9, £12, £15, £18 and £21. 

*Excludes £1.50 booking fee

Reviews

‘The collection’s major achievement is its unfailing attentiveness to the framing of history through the stories of individuals and collectives that the poet holds, urgently, ethically & so skilfullly‘
The Guardian on Jay Bernard's Surge

The Pit