Skip to main content

Project Nationalism and Theatre in Contemporary India

Notes

Contemporary Theatre Review Volume 32 Issue Number 1 February 2022

p21-45

Artist / Author Ashis Sengupta
Editor David Calder, Broderick Chow, Maria M. Delgado, Maggie B. Gale, Bryce Lease, Cariad Svich, Sarah Thomasson
Publisher Routledge
Reference A0912
Date 2024
Type Article

Keywords

Similar items

Dinner With America

Artist/Author: Rajni Shah | Reference: P4251 | ISBN: 978-1-907055-00-3

Dinner with America is the second in a trilogy of performance installations addressing the complexities of cultural identity in the 21st Century. Where the first piece in the trilogy, Mr Quiver (Nuffield Autumn 07), explored Indian and English stereotypes, this piece questions what America means to us.

 

As the performance space shifts and transforms around the audience, it gently uncovers themes of consumerism, rights, ownership, voices, hopes, harvest and division in a visually compelling and unusual piece of work.

 

This booklet was published in November 2008 to accompany the touring production of Dinner with America by Rajni Shah Theatre. All images, films and texts were made during and as part of the creative process. They are designed to illuminate both the core and outlying ideas that inhabited the artists’ thinking at the time of making the show, between February 2007 and November 2008.

Jess Dobkin's Wetrospective: Constellating Performance Archives

Artist/Author: Laura Levin | Reference: P4247 | ISBN: 978-1-83595-044-9 | Type: Publication

Celebrating the first-ever retrospective exhibition of performance art icon Jess Dobkin, this book reflects on the internationally acclaimed artist’s playful and provocative practice as a performer, curator, and community activist, and asks: How do archives perform? With contributions by more than twenty renowned performance scholars, archivists, and creative collaborators and a riot of full-colour photographs, Jess Dobkin’s Wetrospective provides unparalleled access to Dobkin’s artistic process and production from the last thirty years.

Leigh Bowery: Performative Costuming and Live Art

Artist/Author: Sofia Vranou | Reference: P4246 | ISBN: 978-1-83595-123-1 | Type: Publication

A critical exploration of the creative practice, socio-historical context and cultural impact of multifaceted artist Leigh Bowery. Engaging with Bowery’s key looks and live art through a variety of disciplines and challenging research contexts, Sofia Vranou navigates costuming as a performative strategy that blurs the boundaries between art and life.

Thought-provoking and enlightening, the study investigates his aesthetics of freakishness and narcissistic desire as well as his fascination with extremity, hybrid embodiments and trans-queer visual language, establishing Bowery as a radical figure in contemporary perfromance and queer visual culture.

Self Defense: A Philosophy of Violence

Artist/Author: Elsa Dorlin | Reference: P4242 | ISBN: 978-1-83976-105-8 | Type: Publication

Is violent self-defense ethical? In the history of colonialism, racism, sexism, capitalism, there has long been a dividing line between bodies “worthy of defending” and those who who have been disarmed and rendered defenseless. That those subject to the most violence-the enslaved, the colonized, the oppressed-have been forcibly made defenseless raises, for any movement of liberation, a question: Can violence be used in the interests of self-defense?

Philosopher Elsa Dorlin looks across the global history of the left to trace the politics, philosophy, and ethics of self-defense. With a historical gaze that captures slave revolts, British suffragists’ training in jujitsu, and the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising to the Black Panther Party, queer neighborhood patrols, and Black Lives Matter, Dorlin discovers a “martial ethics of the self”: a practice in which violent self-defense is the only means for the oppressed to ensure survival and to build a livable future.

Translated from the French by Kieran Aarons.

America: The Troubled Continent of Thought

Artist/Author: Avital Ronell | Reference: P4239 | ISBN: 978-1-5095-6027-1 | Type: Publication

What position does America occupy in the recent history of western philosophy?

At a time when the syntagm “America” has come to crystallize a certain understanding of the world order, interrogating the place that it occupies in our intellectual and haunted tradition is also a way to engage critically with the violence attached to it. America’s self-understanding involves violence, but this violence may well be different from what we imagined.

Solar Politics

Artist/Author: Oxana Timofeeva | Reference: P4236 | ISBN: 978-1-5095-4965-8 | Type: Publication

This book is a philosophical essay on the sun. It draws on Georges Bataille’s theories of the solar economy and solar violence and demonstrates their relevance to a world affected by the COVID-19 pandemic and climate change.

Taking a step from solar economy to solar politics, Timofeeva locates the grounds for it in solidarity with nature, treated neither as a master nor as a slave, but as a comrade.

The book will appeal to students, academics, artists, and other readers interested in the philosophy of nature, ecology, social and political theory, postcolonial and decolonial studies, and the humanities generally.

Copy of Oral Histories of the Revolution

Artist/Author: Tania El Khoury | Reference: A0940 | Type: Article

Next Wave Festival 2014 Magazine : New Grand Narrative

Pg. 32

Oral Histories of the Revolution,  Tania El Khoury

 

Acts of Affect: siren eun young jung’s Yeoseong Gukgeuk Project

Artist/Author: Ashley Chang | Editor: Ute Meta Bauer, Nav Haq, Mark Lewis, Adeena Mey, Charles Esche, Mark Lewis | Reference: A0936 | ISBN: 978-184638-217-8 | Type: Article

Afterall Journal

Issue 49 Spring/Summer 2020 – ‘Extractivism’ – looks at a nexus of practices engaging with environmental issues and extractivist capitalism. In parallel, it covers alternative ways in which artists are occupying spaces of art, history or economics.

pg. 59-67

In Acts of Affect, siren eun young jung returns to the disappearing Yeoseong Gukgeuk theatre. In her discussion of the project, Ashley Chang examines how masculinity is produced by women.

Anomalous Tradition, Queer Enchantment: On the Work of siren eun young jung

Artist/Author: Hyunjin Kim | Editor: Ute Meta Bauer, Nav Haq, Mark Lewis, Adeena Mey, Charles Esche, Mark Lewis | Reference: A0935 | ISBN: 978-184638-217-8 | Type: Article

Afterall Journal

Issue 49 Spring/Summer 2020 – ‘Extractivism’ – looks at a nexus of practices engaging with environmental issues and extractivist capitalism. In parallel, it covers alternative ways in which artists are occupying spaces of art, history or economics.

pg.49-57

Hyunjin Kim contextualises siren eun young jung’s audio-visual work at the 2019 Venice Biennale in relation to queer performance in South Korean history.

Elmgreen & Dragset : Inconvenient Truths

Artist/Author: Marcus Verhagen | Editor: Mark Rappolt, David Terrien, Skye Sherwin, J.J. Charlesworth, Laura Allsop | Reference: A0933 | Type: Article

Art Review Issue 26  / October 2008

pg. 74-81

Feature on Elmgreen & Dragset : Inconvenient Truths

Taking Receipts: A Log of Aggression for People of Color

Artist/Author: Aram Han Sifuentes, Ishita Dharap | Reference: P4227 | Type: Publication

“Sadly, as people of color we experience discrimination everyday. It’s exhausting. And when it happens, we often question ourselves, thinking: Did that just happen? Am I being too sensitive? And when we can identify that it is discrimination and speak to it, we’re often questioned and others often don’t believe us or brush us off, calling us too sensitive or angry. The burden falls on us to prove that we are being discriminated against. This book is here for you to take detailed logs of your everyday aggressions so that you can show off your receipts–proof.” Aram Han Sifuentes

Designed and illustrated by Ishita Dharap.

On Scent in Theatre Audience Research : Sensory Mining and Olfactory Archives

Artist/Author: Freya Verlander | Editor: Maria M. Delgado, Maggie B. Gale, Bryce Lease, Sarah Thomasson & Sir Anril Pineda Tiatco | Reference: A0931 | ISBN: 1048-6801 | Type: Article

Contemporary Theatre Review, Volume 33, Issue 3 (2023)

On Scent in Theatre Audience Research : Sensory Mining and Olfactory Archives, Freya Verlander

This article uses netnographic research methods, as a form of olfactory sensory mining, to investigate the smell-based experiences of audience members at Punchdrunk’s Sleep No More (2011).

Donation

£