Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Populism and Performance
View graph of relations

Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Unpublished

Standard

Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism. / Rowe, Cami.
2022. Paper presented at International Studies Association Annual Convention, Nashville, TN, United States.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paper

Harvard

Rowe, C 2022, 'Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism', Paper presented at International Studies Association Annual Convention, Nashville, TN, United States, 28/03/22 - 2/04/23.

APA

Rowe, C. (2022). Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism. Paper presented at International Studies Association Annual Convention, Nashville, TN, United States.

Vancouver

Rowe C. Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism. 2022. Paper presented at International Studies Association Annual Convention, Nashville, TN, United States.

Author

Rowe, Cami. / Populism and Performance : Creative Encounters with Agonism. Paper presented at International Studies Association Annual Convention, Nashville, TN, United States.

Bibtex

@conference{a67e6783554a4aaabba8a880fa749297,
title = "Populism and Performance: Creative Encounters with Agonism",
abstract = "This paper contributes to an understanding of populist political interaction by applying perspectives from performance theory and theatrical practice, enabling a view of populism that accounts for its embodied and material elements. This has significant implications for the pursuit of agonism and, as Chantal Mouffe and others advocate, the necessity to retain presences of opposition and difference. By paying due attention to the ways that political interaction is shaped by embodied, physical encounters, we can further our understanding of the ways that agonistic democracy unfolds in practice. Theatrical practice - including {\textquoteleft}applied{\textquoteright} practices that adapt techniques from the stage for the purpose of broader social and political contexts - is particularly adept at facilitating the capacity for people to experience duality; theatre enables participants to experience a sense of being more than one thing at once, holding in mind the values they embrace as part of their own identity, while also imagining and enacting alternative perspectives or values. When undertaken through group creative projects, such experiences transform conflict into collaborative process. This paper therefore suggests that we can draw on applied performance practices to find new ways of encouraging participants in democratic processes to collectively act as adversaries rather than enemies.",
keywords = "Arts And Architecture, Populism, Conflict Resolution, Democracy, Interdisciplinary Research, Popular Culture, Theatre",
author = "Cami Rowe",
year = "2022",
month = mar,
day = "30",
language = "English",
note = "International Studies Association Annual Convention ; Conference date: 28-03-2022 Through 02-04-2023",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Populism and Performance

T2 - International Studies Association Annual Convention

AU - Rowe, Cami

PY - 2022/3/30

Y1 - 2022/3/30

N2 - This paper contributes to an understanding of populist political interaction by applying perspectives from performance theory and theatrical practice, enabling a view of populism that accounts for its embodied and material elements. This has significant implications for the pursuit of agonism and, as Chantal Mouffe and others advocate, the necessity to retain presences of opposition and difference. By paying due attention to the ways that political interaction is shaped by embodied, physical encounters, we can further our understanding of the ways that agonistic democracy unfolds in practice. Theatrical practice - including ‘applied’ practices that adapt techniques from the stage for the purpose of broader social and political contexts - is particularly adept at facilitating the capacity for people to experience duality; theatre enables participants to experience a sense of being more than one thing at once, holding in mind the values they embrace as part of their own identity, while also imagining and enacting alternative perspectives or values. When undertaken through group creative projects, such experiences transform conflict into collaborative process. This paper therefore suggests that we can draw on applied performance practices to find new ways of encouraging participants in democratic processes to collectively act as adversaries rather than enemies.

AB - This paper contributes to an understanding of populist political interaction by applying perspectives from performance theory and theatrical practice, enabling a view of populism that accounts for its embodied and material elements. This has significant implications for the pursuit of agonism and, as Chantal Mouffe and others advocate, the necessity to retain presences of opposition and difference. By paying due attention to the ways that political interaction is shaped by embodied, physical encounters, we can further our understanding of the ways that agonistic democracy unfolds in practice. Theatrical practice - including ‘applied’ practices that adapt techniques from the stage for the purpose of broader social and political contexts - is particularly adept at facilitating the capacity for people to experience duality; theatre enables participants to experience a sense of being more than one thing at once, holding in mind the values they embrace as part of their own identity, while also imagining and enacting alternative perspectives or values. When undertaken through group creative projects, such experiences transform conflict into collaborative process. This paper therefore suggests that we can draw on applied performance practices to find new ways of encouraging participants in democratic processes to collectively act as adversaries rather than enemies.

KW - Arts And Architecture

KW - Populism

KW - Conflict Resolution

KW - Democracy

KW - Interdisciplinary Research

KW - Popular Culture

KW - Theatre

M3 - Conference paper

Y2 - 28 March 2022 through 2 April 2023

ER -