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This Is What “Resilience” Looks Like
The best definition that theatre has offered so far
It’s a word that could mean almost anything. But in Steve Waters’ double-bill The Contingency Plan (2009), one of the characters gives the best definition of “resilience” that has so far appeared on stage.
The setting is a cabinet room in Whitehall. Colin Jenks, the government’s chief scientific advisor, is addressing a small, high-powered group of politicians and civil servants.
He starts by asking the question: “What is resilience?” The first answer he gives is the ecological definition. Resilience, he says, is “the capacity of a system to maintain its stability in the face of change and external shocks.” Resilience is, in effect, “stability”.
That’s a bit abstract so, to make his point, he asks them all to stand up.
“Imagine you’re a native English wood,” he says, “that you’re the flora and fauna of this wood, which survives on its own terms and is entirely, as it were, resilient.” Jenks tells the group, “You can be any one of the following elements of that system: soil, tree, mammal, insect.”
He suggests that Chris Casson, the minister for climate change, be a tree. Chris asks to be an oak.