Like a Girl's Name

2012 ◽  
Vol 56 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-76
Author(s):  
Anna Watkins Fisher

What if the future of feminist art lay not in images of self-mastery, dignity, and maturity but rather in performances of teen regression? Adolescent drag designates a performance of irony, awkwardness, and equivocality that expands the identificatory repertoire available to a generation of women who are said to have inherited from Western feminism.

2021 ◽  
Vol 187 ◽  
pp. 20-25
Author(s):  
Amelia Ehrhardt ◽  
Jenn Goodwin ◽  
Cathy Gordon

In the format of an interpolated Zoom transcript, former SummerWorks Curators Amelia Ehrhardt, Jenn Goodwin, and Cathy Gordon discuss the disciplining and undisciplining of SummerWorks Performance Festival between 2015 and 2019. The authors came to SummerWorks as specific curators of the dance and live-art streams and watched the festival grow from being a theatre-focused festival known to invite other art forms to a performance festival focused on a multidisciplinary perspective. Ehrhardt, Goodwin, and Gordon discuss the festival’s transition and specific works that exemplified their curatorial lenses-Ehrhardt and Goodwin from dance and Gordon from live art. "Is Dearth a Little or a Lot?" reads conversationally with an editorial voice interrogating the transcript, checking facts, or chiming in with context like a pop-up-video-style literary device. The authors question the function and outcome of creating discipline-specific streams for artists, audiences, and the structure of the festival and discuss hopes for the future of an undisciplined festival.


2020 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 42-42
Author(s):  
Karen Hart
Keyword(s):  

As a performance storyteller for children of all ages, Craig Jenkins had to shift his performances online when coronavirus struck. He tells Karen Hart how these sessions swiftly sold out and how this has fuelled his plans for the future.


2009 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 153-158
Author(s):  
BJÖRN FRERS

This article examines how the future is expressed and experienced in the theatre. Referring to the performance Karl Marx: Capital, First Volume by the German artistic collective Rimini Protokoll, the article exemplifies the relation between the past, the present and the future, showing how the different layers of time are interrelated. The performers involved are not professional actors but so-called ‘experts’, whose lives are connected to Marx's Capital in different ways. Based on the experts’ biographies, the performance not only offers a rereading of Marx's ideology, but also shows similarities between Rimini Protokoll's artistic and Marx's scientific approach, between the conceptualization of one's life and watching a performance in theatre.


2009 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 166-172
Author(s):  
JOY KRISTIN KALU

This article examines the realization of the future in performance through aesthetic experience. Following the historian Reinhardt Koselleck, who introduces the category of ‘experience’ as the present past, and ‘expectation’ as the present future, in order to formulate a theory of possible histories, I examine the interconnection of different time layers and the potentiality of a performance. I argue that every performance constitutes a space of possibility, defined by a permeation of traces of the past and the future, emergent phenomena characteristic of performance, and a dimension of future inherent in the performative materiality. Hamlet by New York's Wooster Group serves as an example for an analysis focusing on the aesthetic experience of the future in performance. The Hamlet performance proves exceptionally suitable, since the staging is based on a theatrical repetition of the film document of a Hamlet performance long past, and unfolds a complex system of past and future bound time layers.


2007 ◽  
Vol 19 (1) ◽  
pp. 85-89
Author(s):  
THOMAS W. LAQUEUR

It seems a very long way from a dog howling in pain on François Magendie’s laboratory table in 1816 to Gilbert-Louis Duprez’s more-or-less novel accomplishment at the Paris Opéra two decades later: the tenor’s high C from the chest; the darkened voice; the sound of the future first heard in a performance of Guillaume Tell. Most obviously, the sounds of the dog were horrible and horrifying. When Magendie’s teacher, the great Xavier Bichat, tried the experiment some years earlier, his cleaning lady asked to move her chambers from near the scene because she could not bear the dog’s cries. Duprez’s sound was, arguably, beautiful; at least some people thought so, even if two doctors, driven to study the physiology of singing by the occasion, claimed that most people thought the voice was forced and false. Whether it was ‘pathological’ or not – I’d prefer, at worse, ‘pathogenic’ in the sense that so many unnatural new activities of the nineteenth century, like sitting long hours at a desk or riding on a train, were thought to make one ill – the tenor’s high C did, even its detractors admitted, ‘transport and dominate with its power’. It was musical and in the minds of many opened up radically new interpretative possibilities.


2018 ◽  
Vol 22 (36) ◽  
pp. 168
Author(s):  
Alan Felipe Caires

O objetivo deste trabalho é demonstrar a importância do Planejamento Estratégico nas Organizações, destacando a Administração Estratégica como um planejamento eficiente e eficaz em uma organização dentro do conceito de clima de ambiente organizacional. Serão mostradas as prioridades que possuem o processo de implementação do planejamento estratégico através de uma administração, que procura esclarecer seus aspectos, missão, valores e visão de mercado, com o intuito de demonstrar através de opiniões de especialistas  como deve ser tratado o planejamento estratégico, atualmente, e qual o objetivo que o planejamento estratégico influenciará no futuro da organização, com a visão crítica e analítica da posição que o mercado atuará e a performance que a empresa irá atingir por meio da desenvoltura do planejamento estratégico aplicado. Palavras-chave: Planejamento. Administração Estratégica. Estratégia Empresarial. AbstractThe aim of this paper is to demonstrate the importance of strategic planning in the organizations, highlighting the strategic management and efficient and effective planning in an organization within the concept of organizational climate environment. Priorities will be shown that has the implementation process of strategic planning by an administration that seeks to clarify aspects, mission, values and vision of the market, aiming to demonstrate through expert opinions on how it should be dealt with planning today and what the strategic goal that strategic planning will influence the future of the organization, with a critical and analytical position that the market will act and the performance that the company will achieve through the   resourcefulness of strategic planning applied. Keywords: Planning. Strategic. Business Strategy. 


2009 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 159-165
Author(s):  
RUTHIE ABELIOVICH

This essay examines theatrical dimensions of the future in Signals, a performance by the Israeli vocalist Victoria Hanna. An examination of four scenes from this performance, I argue, shows that the sounds in Hanna's voice act in the symbolic dualities of female–male, human–technological, and embodied–disembodied figures. These dualities amplify the discrepancy between Hanna's staged identity (female, human, embodied figure) and an absent exterior other (male, technological, disembodied figure). The notion of ‘envoicement’ is developed in order to analyse these dualities and, in particular, to explore the body–voice relationship that they compose. Drawing on Emmanuel Levinas's ethical theory in Time and the Other, I argue that the meaning attributed to the future is never conveyed in its presence but rather in its absence; that is, signifying practices that represent the absent exterior referent stage the future. Through this central claim, I thus assert that Hanna's disembodied voice ‘envoices’ the future.


2014 ◽  
Vol 46 (11) ◽  
pp. 2569-2584 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carl Lavery ◽  
Deborah P Dixon ◽  
Lee Hassall

Here, we present an iteration of our theoretical/creative writing project Hashima, begun in 2012. The paper is a collaboration and draws on the different discourses, practices and sensibilities of a performance theorist, a geographer, and a visual artist. For us, Hashima, located off the coast of Nagasaki, Japan, and a former site of forced labor and intensive offshore coal-mining, is a provocation for experimentation. Hashima, exploited and abject, has offered itself, unsurprisingly, to the fetishistic gaze of artists, photographers urban explorers, and ruin enthusiasts. The logic here is to control representation, and to determine and fix the meaning of the island as always in reference to something else and elsewhere. Paradoxically, there is no sense of temporality or transformation in these representations of ruins; time has been stopped in an image. By contrast, we want to draw out the allegorical value of Hashima not as a site of loss, but as a baroque, blasted landscape of monstrous becomings that resists, and forefronts, this tendency to collapse history into nature. In the following, we introduce the island before turning to an exegesis of Walter Benjamin's writing on German baroque tragedy in order to demonstrate how representation itself becomes tainted through a material encounter with the baroque's two primary topoi, the ruin and the labyrinth. To do this, we finish with a creative narrative and two images illustrating our methodology.


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