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Inter(Action), Transformation, and Inclusion through Embodied and Performance Art Practice

Publikace na Pedagogická fakulta |
2021

Tento text není v aktuálním jazyce dostupný. Zobrazuje se verze "en".Abstrakt

This presentation is part of a larger study, The Body as Locus: Toward a Pedagogy of Inclusion through Performance Art-Based Practice', related to Horizon2020 AMASS framework and investigating the role of performance art practice as a form of critical pedagogy through which new narratives of identity can be constructed and paradigms of power and cultural inscription can be critiqued. The paper will introduce the broader themes of this research and specifically examine the body as a locus - a point from which, according to Merleau-Ponty, perception is situated and knowledge is constructed.

Drawing on performances and actions from post WWII Czech Republic, specifically the work of artists representing Czech Action Art from the1960s to 1990s and their contemporaries along with current performance methods in education and social practice, this paper and subsequent research explores the potential for an embodied approach to address issues of inclusion for marginalized groups: through reconstituting identity in terms of individual transformation and as a way of repositioning oneself in relationship to Other. Inclusion by its very definition implies embodiment.

The body is a social body - It does not know "I" without the gaze of an other; its movements are not scripted but are fluid and ever-changing reacting to stimulus in our environment, the language of metaphor that we have internalized, the cultural values that are inscribed into our bodies, and the presence of another. How then can an embodied and performance art based practice reconcile a subject's body and knowledge through participatory exercises that promote feelings of belonging and connectedness.

Definitions of Subject from Butler and Lacan, Althusser's concept of interpellation, and post-structuralist theories of embodied teaching and learning provide a lens through which to position performance art education as praxis of postmodern theory (Garoian, YEAR).