Date:    Tue, 9 Jul 2013 13:41:41 +0100

From:    Lucy Nevitt <[log in to unmask]>

Subject: Reminder: Call for papers: Questions of Aesthetics and Participation

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RiDE: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance

Call for papers: Questions of Aesthetics and Participation


In this themed edition on questions of aesthetics and participation, we seek

contributions to debates about audience and participation and about the ways

that notions and practices of aesthetics and reception affect notion and

practices of participation, or provoke the existence of participatory work

in the first place.

In November 2010, this journal published a themed edition on the aesthetics

of applied theatre and performance. The editors and contributors developed a

series of interventions into debates and discourses of aesthetics in applied

theatre practice. Following on from this work, and from the publication of

Claire Bishopıs Artificial Hells: Participatory Art and the Politics of

Spectatorship (2012), we would like to invite artists, educators, scholars

and cultural critics to participate in further debate.

This, then, is an invitation to engage in questions about the cultural value

and artistic quality of applied and community performance, but specifically

to relate the discussion to questions and problems of participation in

theatre, performance and education. For the purposes of this discussion, we

might choose to think very broadly about participation, or even to ask

questions that make more precise our use of the term.

We are interested in hearing about the many works and projects that attempt

to upset, blur or otherwise confound the distinction between facilitator and

participant. We are also keen to consider how notions and relations of

education and learning contribute to the cultural or artistic value of

participation. It also seems important to address the way that works are

framed: how do notions of aesthetics, beauty and art inform reception and

production in participatory work?

To look at the question from another perspective, we can also ask how

experiences of beauty and transcendence are communicated beyond the specific

moment of performance in works that are primarily focused on participants.

The working methods and aesthetic innovations of community work, for

example, belong among the significant achievements of culture, and yet

innovations often remain restrictively isolated and specific.

When making community or participatory performance, to what extent is it

possible to think (only) of the audience? How might audiences prepare for

the watching of this work? How do we develop an elaborated culture of

reception for community and participatory art work? How do educators relate

their own artistic practice and participation to debates around aesthetics

and cultural value?

We seek proposals for work in the following forms:

Scholarly articles of around 5,000 words

Review essays of works (performed and written) that have importance to this

theme.

Provocations and other accounts by practitioners

Interviews and dialogues between performance makers/practitioners

Contributions that challenge or extend the possibilities for participating

in this conversation


As part of the development of conversations around this themed edition,

there will be an invited symposium on 18th September 2013 at the University

of Hull, UK. This symposium will be an opportunity to develop focused

discussion on questions of aesthetics and participation. The symposium will

give opportunity to develop arguments and ideas for the themed issue.

Colleagues might wish to contribute to the symposium and also to the themed

issue, or to one or other of these conversations.

RiDE: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance is a refereed journal

aimed at those who are interested in applying performance practices to

cultural engagement, educational innovation and social change. It provides

an international forum for research into drama and theatre conducted in

community, educational, developmental and therapeutic contexts. The journal

offers a dissemination of completed research and research in progress, and

through its Points and Practices section it encourages debate between

researchers both on its published articles and on other matters.

Contributions are drawn from a range of people involved in drama and theatre

from around the world. It aims to bring the fruits of the best researchers

to an international readership and to further debates in the rich and

diverse field of educational drama and applied theatre.


Peer Review Policy:

All research articles in this journal undergo rigorous peer review, based on

initial editor screening and anonymised refereeing by at least two anonymous

referees. All reviewers are internationally recognized in their field, and

the editorial board of RiDE aim to support scholars from many different

parts of the world.


Expressions of interest in Symposium: 30th July 2013

Detailed abstracts: 1st November 2013

Full drafts of articles: 1st February 2014.


All enquiries and submissions should be sent to Colette Conroy, the editor

of the themed edition: [log in to unmask]

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