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Subject:

CFP

From:

Savas Patsalidis <[log in to unmask]>

Reply-To:

SCUDD List at JISC <[log in to unmask]>

Date:

Mon, 30 Aug 2021 12:30:04 +0300

Content-Type:

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A FRIENDLY REMINDER: if you click REPLY to this email, you will be sending an email to over 3000 subscribers. Please do so only if you wish to respond to everyone. To join, leave or suspend list postings, visit scudd.org.uk/members/scudd-mailing-list/
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Critical Stages/Scènes critiques
International Association of Theatre Critics (IATC)
Association internationale des critiques de théâtre (AICT)
ISSN:2409-7411

CALL FOR PAPERS

Theatre and Ecology

Critical Stages/Scènes critiques is a peer-reviewed on-line journal
fully committed to the Open Access Initiative. It offers a platform
for debate and exploration of a wide range of theatre and performance
art manifestations from all over the world.
Critical Stages/Scènes critiques is indexed by SCOPUS and ERIH PLUS


Guest Editors: Elizabeth Sakellaridou and Vicky Angelaki

Special Issue, December 2022 (#26)

The 26th issue of Critical Stages/Scènes critiques addresses the
various ways in which contemporary theatre and performance have
engaged with the environmental crisis that has made radical action on
the part of both state and society more than an urgent imperative.
 From playwrights sensitive to ecological issues to theatre
practitioners putting up ecologically-motivated performances and
eco-events and environment-inspired theorists and critics, one can
notice a remarkable cultural production actively involved in issues
concerning the preservation of the planet from an imminent
irreversible catastrophe.

When Caryl Churchill wrote her prophetic one-act play Not Not Not Not
Not Enough Oxygen in 1971, projecting her fears well into the 21st
century, she was not in much company within the theatre community.
Very few would anticipate then that the dystopian future she envisaged
for the world (London in particular) was not the mere fruit of an
unharnessed imagination. Rereading the play today renders it more
topical and urgent than ever before. In the fifty years that
followed, Churchill has been constantly aware, in her recent work in
particular, of an alarmingly deteriorating situation, which she has
now presented as a stark reality of doom but always in an amazingly
versatile, experimental style. Today, however, a whole chorus of new
theatre voices follow in her steps. Not only new dramatists but also
socially/politically engaged directors, companies and performers have
placed the climate emergency, overpopulation, pollution, resource
drain and other related environmental issues as a priority in their
activist agendas. Relevant scholarly work is also flowering, with new
books being published in numbers, especially in the second decade of
our century, and many journals launching special issues on this
burning subject.

Although the present focus on ecology has its origins in the
scientific investigation of the second half of the 19th century, it is
only now that it has become an emergency for governments and
scientists alike and a massive movement promoted by social and
artistic groups. The new popularity of Ibsen’s An Enemy of the People
on the contemporary stage is a tribute to the Norwegian dramatist as a
pioneer of the theatre’s ecological concerns.

  Starting with Ibsen’s emblematic position, we would like to invite
new research embracing all aspects of modern and contemporary theatre
and performance activities worldwide in the area of changing policies
for the prevention of catastrophe and the improvement of non-human and
human life on our planet.

Among the numerous relevant publications we will indicatively mention
two eloquent titles, Carl Lavery’s Performance and Ecology: What Can
Theatre Do? (2018) and Dillon Slagle’s “The Aesthetic Evolution of Eco
Theater” (2013) which point to the two primary directions that we
would like to cover in this special issue:

• The political agenda of ecotheatre
• The form of ecologically-oriented play texts and the aesthetics of
ecologically- driven performance

Potential topics that might be addressed in this special issue are
indicated below. This list is certainly not an exhaustive one but one
that we hope and expect to be enriched further:

• Prophetic theatre
• Theatres of doom and catastrophe
• Apocalyptic visions at the turn of the century
• New naturalisms
• Gender and Ecology
• Sexuality theatre and ecology
• Ethnicity and ecology
• Local and global ecologies
• Interventionist tactics of ecoperformance
• Realist and anti-realist approaches to the environmental crisis
• Cautionary and corrective approaches to the climate crisis
• Interpretative (re)visions

Timeline

Please submit 250-300 word proposals for articles to Professor
Elizabeth Sakellaridou, [log in to unmask] and Professor Vicky
Angelaki, [log in to unmask] by 15 October 2021, accompanied by a
brief biographical note (about 50 words).

We shall contact prospective authors in November 2021
The final version of the articles will be due 1 October 2022
Publication date: December 2022

NOTE: For full details regarding submission guidelines please visit:
https://www.critical-stages.org/submission-guidelines/


We look forward to hearing from you!

BIOS

Elizabeth Sakellaridou is Professor Emerita of Theatre Studies at the
Aristotle University of Thessaloniki. She has taught and published on
theatre and performance, English and European dramaturgy (including
Greek theatre) as well as gender and cultural studies. Her other
interdisciplinary interest lies in performance phenomenology. Among
her major publications are Pinter’s Female Portraits (1988), Women’s
Theatre , Theatre, Aesthetics, Politics (2012) and a variety of
articles in international journals and collected volumes. She
currently teaches applied theatre in an MA programme for training
drama-therapists. She is theatre and culture advisor at the
Municipality of Thessaloniki and board member of various European
theatre journals.

Vicky Angelaki is Professor in English Literature at Mid Sweden
University. She was previously based in the United Kingdom, where she
held roles at the University of Reading, the University of Birmingham,
and Birmingham City University. Major publications include: Theatre &
Environment (2019); Social and Political
Theatre in 21st-Century Britain: Staging Crisis (2017); Contemporary
British Theatre: Breaking New Ground (2013; 2016); The Plays of Martin
Crimp: Making Theatre Strange (2012). She is currently co-editing The
Cambridge Companion to British Playwriting since 1945 with Dan
Rebellato and preparing the monograph Martin Crimp's Power Plays:
Intertextuality, Sexuality, Desire (Routledge). Angelaki also co-edits
the Palgrave Macmillan series Adaptation in Theatre and Performance
with Kara Reilly.





Savas Patsalidis
Theatre Professor
Aristotle University
Thessaloniki-Greece
Editor-in-Chief
Critical Stages/Scènes critiques (the journal of IATC--International
Association of Theatre Critics)
President of the Hellenic Association of Theatre and Performing Arts Critics
https://auth.academia.edu/SavasPatsalidis
https://www.linkedin.com/in/savas-patsalidis-40b11644/
https://www.facebook.com/savas.patsalidis
http://savaspatsalidis.blogspot.com/

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