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Performing Viral Pandemics?

Started by aha. Last reply by aha May 11, 2020. 2 Replies

Hi.Hopefully all is well!The shorty is a suggestion to start an online conversation group to elaborate questions from theCovid-19 oriented period and Performance Philosophy?eg. Intra-Active Virome?…Continue

We all have the same dream?

Started by Egemen Kalyon Apr 2, 2020. 0 Replies

Hello, "We all have the same dream" is my project that aims to create an archive from the dreams of our era and reinterpret Jung's "collective unconscious" concepts with performance and performing…Continue

Circus and Its Others 2020, UC Davis CFP

Started by Ante Ursic Mar 15, 2020. 0 Replies

Circus and its Others 2020November 12-15University of California, DavisRevised Proposal Deadline: April 15, 2020Launched in 2014, the Circus and its Others research project explores the ways in which…Continue

Tags: critical, ethnic, queer, performance, animal

Blog Posts

"Further Evidence on the Meaning of Musical Performance" Working Paper

Posted by Phillip Cartwright on January 15, 2020 at 21:28 0 Comments

Karolina Nevoina and I are pleased to announce availability of our working paper, "Further Evidence on the Meaning of Musical Performance". Special thanks to Professor Aaron Williamon and the Royal College of Music, Centre for Performance Science.…

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Division of Labor - Denis Beaubois

Posted by Gabrielle Senza on February 23, 2018 at 0:36 0 Comments

I just came across Denis Beaubois, an Australian multidisciplinary artist whose work, Currency - Division of Labor might be of interest to researchers here.

It is a series of video/performance works that use the division of labor model in capitalism as a structural tool for performance.

From his website:

The Division of labour work explores…

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Call for Papers: Performing Theory, Theorizing Performance: Conceptualization, Execution, and Documentation

Event Details

Call for Papers: Performing Theory, Theorizing Performance: Conceptualization, Execution, and Documentation

Time: March 16, 2013 all day
Location: Madison, WI
Event Type: conference
Organized By: Theater and Drama Graduate Student Organization
Latest Activity: Nov 13, 2012

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Event Description

Call for Papers

Performing Theory, Theorizing Performance: Conceptualization, Execution, and Documentation

A Graduate Student Conference with the Theatre and Drama Department at University of Wisconsin Madison

March 16, 2013


With keynote speakers:
Chloe Johnston, Assistant Professor of Theater, Lake Forest College, writer and performer with the Neo-Futurists
Coya Paz, Assistant Professor of Theater, Depaul University, founding member of Proyecto Latina, co-director of the Resident Ensemble at Free Street Theatre, Artistic Director for the Poetry Performance Incubator at the Guild Complex

As graduate students we often find ourselves struggling to find a creative outlet for our own theoretical interests, to either put them into practice or test their viability. Even when we find ourselves in the position to create our own work, this creativity may be divorced from the theoretical material we produce. We are often challenged to consider what the applications of our theoretical research, asynchronous of any specific performance, might be. Theory and artistic practice are informed by the world we live in, its histories, languages, cultures, and economic structures. The ways in which performance can recontextualize how we write and what we write are numerous, complex, and instrumental to academic research in the fields of theater, performance studies, and beyond. In this interdisciplinary conference, we want to critically analyze not only how we and others make performance happen but also how those performances then come to inform the writing we do. We welcome proposals from all areas of the humanities, arts, and social sciences that broadly explore the concept of the relationship between theory and performance with particular interest in elements that are theatrical and performative in nature. Possible topics include:

·      Theories of theater, acting, or design
·      Dramaturgical work translated into scholarship
·      Documenting performances
·      Collaboration between academics and performers
·      Interrogating our own performance work
·      Methodological frameworks: their uses and limits
·      The role of interdisciplinarity
·      Intermedial projects and the functions of new technology
·      Ethics of the interview
·      Dramaturgy and the death of the author
·      Shifting cultural contexts and reperformance
·      Authorship sans text

We welcome presentations from graduate students in all areas including acting, directing, design, technology, and theatre research. Graduate students from any and all department are encouraged to submit abstracts. While this conference will feature traditional forms of papers and panels we also encourage non-traditional forms of presentation including performances of texts and visual presentations. Please send abstracts or project proposals of 250 words or less in Microsoft Word (.doc or .docx) or Pages or PDF format to James Burling and Katherine Lieder at TDGSO2013@gmail.com by December 22, 2012.

Please include the title of your paper, your name, affiliation, short bio, and A/V requests. Accepted papers will be grouped into panels with papers of similar thematic material. Papers should be 20 minutes in length.

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