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El. knyga: Performance and Politics in a Digital Populist Age: Imagining Alternatives [Taylor & Francis e-book]

(Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts, Lancaster University, UK)
  • Formatas: 178 pages
  • Serija: Interventions
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780367824129
  • Taylor & Francis e-book
  • Kaina: 147,72 €*
  • * this price gives unlimited concurrent access for unlimited time
  • Standartinė kaina: 211,02 €
  • Sutaupote 30%
  • Formatas: 178 pages
  • Serija: Interventions
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Dec-2022
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • ISBN-13: 9780367824129
"This book re-evaluates the role of performance in global politics in the face of populism and the digital mediatisation of political interactions. As political communications are increasingly conducted in online environments,'post-truth' performances become evermore central to democratic processes. It is therefore essential to reconsider the political potency of performance and theatricality in order to effectively reinvigorate democracy in the 21st century. Drawing on applied theatre practices, this book shows that performance is inherently concerned with cooperative and collaborative encounters across difference, and performance might therefore support effective responses to digital populism. The analysis addresses the performative aspects of populistpolitical movements in the United States and United Kingdom. The chapters engage with aspects of performance and theatricality not commonly broached in IR scholarship, including interpersonal engagement, creative embodiment and interactive affect, makingthe case for the importance of these features to democratic engagement. This book resonates with recent debates regarding the relevance and treatment of Arts and Performance as IR subjects, methodologies and practices, and will be of interest to scholarsand students of global politics, international relations, performance studies, radical democracy, and mass communication and culture"--

This book re-evaluates the role of performance in global politics in the face of populism and the digital mediatisation of political interactions. As political communications are increasingly conducted in online environments,‘post-truth’ performances become evermore central to democratic processes. It is therefore essential to reconsider the political potency of performance and theatricality in order to effectively reinvigorate democracy in the 21st century. Drawing on applied theatre practices, this book shows that performance is inherently concerned with cooperative and collaborative encounters across difference, and performance might therefore support effective responses to digital populism. The analysis addresses the performative aspects of populist political movements in the United States and United Kingdom. The chapters engage with aspects of performance and theatricality not commonly broached in IR scholarship, including interpersonal engagement, creative embodiment and interactive affect, making the case for the importance of these features to democratic engagement. This book resonates with recent debates regarding the relevance and treatment of Arts and Performance as IR subjects, methodologies and practices, and will be of interest to scholars and students of global politics, international relations, performance studies, radical democracy, and mass communication and culture.



This book re-evaluates the role of performance in global politics in the face of populism and the digital mediatisation of political interactions.
Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(8)
PART I Political Populism through the Lens of Performance
9(60)
1 Performance and Politics
11(19)
Interdisciplinarity: Creative Foundations
13(3)
Theatre, Performance and International Politics
16(4)
`Noises Off': Knowledge Waiting in the Wings
20(2)
Practical Bases
22(6)
Conclusion
28(2)
2 Populism and Performance
30(19)
The Problem of Populism
30(2)
Characteristics of Populism
32(7)
Left Populism
39(3)
Digital Populism
42(4)
Conclusion: Redeeming a Left Populism in Practice
46(3)
3 Encounter and Engagement
49(20)
Introducing Agonism
50(3)
The Inadequacies of Agonism
53(3)
Agonism as a Performance Practice
56(1)
Applied Theatre and Agonistic Engagement
57(1)
Difficultating
58(10)
Conclusion
68(1)
PART II Political Embodiment in Digital Populist Contexts
69(36)
4 Embodiment and Perception: Bringing the Inside Out
71(18)
The Meaning and Matters of Bodies
72(1)
The Materially Experienced Body in Political Interaction
73(2)
The Body in Populist Politics
75(4)
Corporeal Perception in Applied Theatre Practices
79(8)
Conclusion
87(2)
5 Embodiment and Relationality: Bringing the Outside In
89(16)
Introducing Object Agency and Haptic Encounters
90(3)
Haptic Encounters in Populism and Digital Populism
93(2)
Insights from Applied Arts and Performance
95(8)
Conclusion
103(2)
PART III The Affective and Aesthetic Dimensions of Populism and Performance
105(36)
6 Fear and Failure
107(17)
Approaches to Aesthetics, Emotion and Affect
108(3)
Fear and Failure in Populist Politics
111(2)
Emotions and Aesthetics in Digital Populism
113(4)
Transforming Fear and Failure through Creative Practice
117(6)
Conclusion
123(1)
7 Pleasure and Beauty
124(17)
Approaching Pleasure and Beauty
124(1)
Populist Pleasure and Beauty
125(8)
Beauty as a Creative Intervention
133(7)
Conclusion: Bringing It All Together
140(1)
Conclusion 141(4)
Notes 145(3)
Bibliography 148(23)
Index 171
Cami Rowe works across the disciplines of Theatre, Performance and International Politics. She holds research degrees in International Politics and Theatre. Based at the Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts, her research addresses the theatrical elements of global politics and the efficacy of performance interventions.