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Performance Philosophy
Performance Philosophy is an international network open to all researchers concerned with the relationship between performance & philosophy.
Started by aha. Last reply by aha May 11, 2020. 2 Replies 0 Likes
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
Started by Egemen Kalyon Apr 2, 2020. 0 Replies 0 Likes
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
Started by Ante Ursic Mar 15, 2020. 0 Replies 0 Likes
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
Posted by Anirban Kumar on May 13, 2020 at 14:27 0 Comments 0 Likes
Posted by Phillip Cartwright on January 15, 2020 at 21:28 0 Comments 0 Likes
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.…
ContinuePosted by Carlos Eduardo Sanabria on December 6, 2019 at 20:01 0 Comments 0 Likes
Posted by Gabrielle Senza on February 23, 2018 at 0:36 0 Comments 1 Like
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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Time: May 7, 2013 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm
Location: Senate House (room 264), University of London
Street: Malet Street
City/Town: London WC1E 7HU
Website or Map: https://maps.google.com/maps?…
Event Type: seminar
Organized By: Theron Schmidt
Latest Activity: May 2, 2013
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We're very pleased to host Laura Cull and Karoline Gritzner, two of the conveners of the Performance Philosophy network, at the next London Theatre Seminar.
Laura Cull (Surrey), “Performance Philosophy: The ‘Mind the Gap’ and/or ‘Performance as Philosophy’ debate”
In this presentation, having narrated something of the emergence and development of the field of Performance Philosophy (and the professional association that seeks to cultivate it), I would like to focus on two related debates at the core of discussions in the area. Amongst the many themes that concerns this new field is what I have described elsewhere as ‘the problem of application’ or illustration – a theme that we share with the sister discipline of Film Philosophy. That is, a fundamental question of the area remains the nature of philosophy’s engagement with its ‘objects’ and to what extent we might challenge the conventional hierarchical relationship between philosophy and performance, broadly construed, in which performance is (ab)used as mere illustration for an existing philosophy rather than as a source of philosophical insight in itself.
Secondly, I will continue to address some of the divergent views concerning the nature of the relationship between performance and philosophy by focusing on what we might call the ‘Mind the Gap’ and/or ‘Performance as Philosophy’ debate. In his provocative keynote at the inaugural Performance Philosophy conference, specifically addressing the context of ‘theatre’, Martin Puchner (2013) argued: “What makes the study of theater and philosophy interesting, even thrilling, is the very fact that they two are so utterly and irreconcilable different, that they are institutions of a very different ilk that cannot be even brought close to each other. It is the and that makes all the difference, it is the gap between theater and philosophy that makes the study of their relation interesting and even possible in the first place. The study of theater and philosophy must take its point of departure from this gap and this gap must remain at the forefront of all successful undertakings in this direction”. Responding to Puchner, and others, I will also explore the alternative view that articulations of ‘philosophy as performance’ and ‘performance as philosophy’ need not be homogenizing or reductive claims that ignore the differences between specific practices; rather, the ‘as’ (in exchange for the ‘and’) signals an opening to reciprocal (in)determination or mutual transformation, as well as questioning the attribution of differences based on conventional disciplinary lines alone.
Karoline Gritzner (Aberystwyth), “Notes on Movement: what happens between the steps?”
This paper addresses the concept of movement as a philosophical and aesthetic idea in selected texts by Kierkegaard, Adorno and Irigaray. In The Concept of Dread Kierkegaard proposes that ‘the very concept of movement is a transcendence which can find no place in logic’. Similarly, movement is central to Irigaray’s metaphysics of sexual difference where fluidity poses a challenge to the logic of the (male) symbolic order. Adorno, too, in his revision of Hegelian philosophy, proposes that ‘philosophy is thought in a perpetual state of motion’. Taking as its reference point the performativity of ‘elemental passions’ (Irigaray) in Argentine tango dance, the paper will examine the interrelationship between material motion and critical fluidity.
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