[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]
[Commlist] CfP Bodies and Performance WG TaPRA: Bodies Beyond the Archive: Traces, temporalities, and disruptions
Mon Mar 07 17:54:21 GMT 2022
*Bodies Beyond the Archive: Traces, temporalities, and disruptions*
Bodies and archives occupy significant space in the conceptual and
practical approaches to performance studies. From Diana Taylor’s
(2003)/The Archive and the Repertoire/to Rebecca Schneider’s
(2016)/Archives Performance Remains/, scholars have explored how
archives and processes of reenactment and re-membering function and the
ideologies supporting them. In///Animacies: Biopolitics, Racial
Mattering, and Queer Affect/(2012), Mel Y. Chen expands notions of
animacies to conceptualise ‘the shifting archive’ (p. 16). By adopting
a fluid approach to transgressing the borders of animate and inanimate,
life and death, Chen’s writing embraces a postcolonial lens, giving
voice to views that have historically been subject to denials and
erasures. Drawing on indigenous approaches, such as the writings
ofJonathan Goldberg-Hiller and Noenoe K. Silva (2011), Chen
evolvesconcepts of animacy which are less characterized by a
categorical, stringent attachment to human exclusivity but instead
embracethe notion of having many bodies, human and nonhuman across many
temporalities.Intertwined with these approaches to decolonising the
archive, is the need to contextualise systems of oppression in order to
understand embodied racial trauma and enable the process of collective
healing.
Thus, the archive is a source of politics and power with the potential
to impact present perceptions and future imaginings of historically
oppressed groups/communities.How might performance disrupt or reinforce
the logics of value which underpin existing approaches to bodies and
archives?How can performance function as a praxis to/body forth/the
archives of the future? In 2014 two important bodies of work sought to
engage with archival practices and human bodies as exhibits. Matt
Fraser’s/Cabinet of Curiosities: How Disability Was Kept in a
Box/reassessed the ways in which disability and disabled people are
portrayed in museums. Brett Bailey’s/Exhibit B/embarked upon a
reenactment of colonial exhibitions to offer a critique of
nineteenth-century ‘human zoos’. The two performances, whilst very
different in nature and the way in which they were received, addressed
the notion of power and privilege within archives; specifically what
bodies are archived and how.
This dynamic of power and privilege has been similarly evident in the
online materials available during the pandemic. While online content
sharing, which often bypasses industry gatekeepers, is often understood
to be more democratic, egalitarian and accessible than in-person
performance, the initial un/availability of professionally filmed
performances revealed systemic exclusions from the archive.For example,
an email request to Digital Theatre+ in June 2020 for filmed theatrical
work by Black British playwrights was answered with a list of
Shakespeare productions from Black and Asian theatre companies (email
correspondence). While certain exclusions were attended to in the
desperate institutional scrambling that followed the May 2020 BLM
protests, there remain significant historiographic questions about the
value systems and attendant material conditions that underpin practices
of video and digital archiving of performance.
In conceptualising disruptive approaches to archives,Prarthana
Purkayastha (2019) examines the structural limitations of contemporary
practices, advocating for the foregrounding of moving bodies and
historical functions as potential anti-racist strategies. This call for
papers invites responses (in the form of traditional papers, workshops,
performative practices) that critically reconsider the problems and
possibilities (current and future) of performance archives and the
bodies represented within and moving beyond them. These responses might
offer strategies for the development of counter and ‘shifting’ archives.
*Possible themes include, but are not limited to:*
* Bodies as archives for racialised trauma
* Performing training as an unmarked archive of ‘standard’ bodies
* Archives in flux
* Archives and erasure: bodies removed, overwritten or overlooked
* Bodily remains and the archive
* Decentering the archive
* Queering ‘the archive: queer archives, counter archives and subcultures
* Bodies in digital archives
* Bodies at risk in archives/Archives at risk as bodies of work
* Future imaginings of postcolonial archives
*References*
Chen, Y, M (2012)/Animacies: Biopolitics, Racial Mattering, and Queer
Affect/. Duke University Press. Durham.
Goldberg-Hiller, J and Silva, N (2011)/Sharks and Pigs: Animating
Hawaiian Sovereignty against the Anthropological Machine/. South
Atlantic Quarterly Volume 110 Issue 2: pp.429–446.
Schneider, R(2016)/Archives Performance Remains: /*//*/Art and War in
Times of Theatrical Reenactment/. Routledge. London.
Taylor, D (2003) The/Archive and the Repertoire: Perorming Cultural
Memory in the Americas/. Duke University Press. Durham.
Conference structure
The 2022 annual TaPRA conference at the University of Essex will be
a hybrid event, facilitating participation by online delegates
alongside those attending in-person.
In the event of a cancellation of in-person conference activities due
to, for instance, COVID restrictions, the event would run entirely
online and all registered in person delegates would be offered the
opportunity to attend as online delegates, with the difference between
in-person and online registration fees refunded.
Process for submitting a proposal
Please email abstracts (no more than 300 words in length), and an
additional few sentences of biographical information to the Working
Group Convenors ((bodiesandperf /at/ tapra.org)
<mailto:(bodiesandperf /at/ tapra.org)>)by*23.59 on 18 March 2022*.
*IMPORTANT:*Please indicate at the point of submission if you intend to
attend the conference in person or online. This information is vital so
that the conference organisers can effectively plan the infrastructure
for the event and Working Group Convenors can schedule panel sessions
effectively.
---------------
The COMMLIST
---------------
This mailing list is a free service offered by Nico Carpentier. Please use it responsibly and wisely.
--
To subscribe or unsubscribe, please visit http://commlist.org/
--
Before sending a posting request, please always read the guidelines at http://commlist.org/
--
To contact the mailing list manager:
Email: (nico.carpentier /at/ vub.ac.be)
URL: http://nicocarpentier.net
---------------
[Previous message][Next message][Back to index]