Theatre and Performance Research Association

 
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Performance, Identity and Community

Performance, Identity and Community

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Statement


The relationships between performance, identity and community are of significant critical concern in theatre and performance studies. This working group explores the ways performance can allow constituencies of interest to be realised and to gain social efficacy. The group understands that each of our three key terms is complex, and that the terms and consequences of their intersection pose challenges for both critical and political practice. We wish to encourage research that engages the rubric of the group inventively and interrogatively, building on a number of key issues and problems:


• The basis on which performance may be linked with concerns of identity and community
• The ways in which relationships between performance, identity and community are materialised and gain theatrical and social efficacy
• The intersection between performance, civil society and democracy
• The historical and geographical inscription of this relationship
• The challenges and opportunities for critical practice posed by examining this relationship.

Co-conveners

Nadine Holdsworth Colette Conroy
Snior Lecturer in Drama
Senior Lecturer in Drama
Department of Theatre Studies
School of Creative Arts
University of Warwick University West of England
This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

          Samina





 

Call for papers 2008

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Call for Papers for 2008 Conference: Populism and Marginality

For TaPRA 2008 we invite contributions that respond in any way to the working group’s statement above. However, we are particularly keen to organise our discussions around ideas of populism and marginality. This is a deliberately wide frame to enable us to consider questions of representation, address, participation, advocacy and recognition. Notions of ‘the popular’ and ‘the people’ are notoriously vague but extremely powerful. They underpin a wide range of assumptions about political organisation and representation, and form a context for the analysis of the production and consumption of culture and the arts. From the guarantee of the right to ‘high quality arts experiences’, to the offering of five portions of art per week for school children, UK state bodies posit a direct correlation between social cohesion, social good and cultural activity which seem to extend beyond engagement in mass and popular culture. How do theatre and performance interact with the popular? Is there a need to develop and enhance popular taste, or must artists and academics learn to find the political in the popular? What does it mean for performance to serve a community in this political context? How can we conceptualise and analyse this relationship between artist and citizen, and what are the political implications of this analysis? How do ideas of consumerism and choice enter this relationship? What is the relationship between the vernacular, the folk and the popular?

We invite papers and proposals for panel discussions that engage with theatre and performance artists in their attempts to engage with constituencies of any sort, from the most elite to the most ubiquitous, from the commercially successful, to the politically disenfranchised. We also look for contributions that will critique and analyse the problematic framing of the popular and the marginal. We see issues of advocacy and inclusion as hugely influential in the analysis of this area and encourage contributors who work in this field to question their approach and practice: what are the problems/limitations of 'acting' the 'advocate'? Is it possible to advocate for others without problematic relations of power being involved? What does it mean to speak for others who are unwilling/unable to speak for themselves? Where do we get our knowledge of other perspectives, and how do we analyse the dynamics of power at play in this field?

Please send a brief (250 word) proposal and a brief biographical statement by Monday the 5th of May to Nadine Holdsworth ( This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ) and Colette Conroy ( This e-mail address is being protected from spambots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it ).

NB. At TaPRA 2008 the Performance, Identity, Community working group will be offering at least one shared panel with the Applied Theatre and Performance working group to explore areas of intersection and convergence.

 

Conference 2007

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For the 2007 conference, the Performance, Identity and Community Working Group focused on the theme of Performance and Cultural Value.
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