Reading feminism, new materialism and post-colonial thought through costume in performance : materiality, culture and the body
Auteurs : Barbieri, Donatella (Auteur)
Date de publication : 2022
Université : Goldsmiths University of London
Programme d'étude : Theatre and performance
Cycle d'étude : Doctorat
Langue : Anglais
Description : 133 pages
Notes : Références : p. 104-119
Dépouillement du document :
Introduction
- Contexts and Idea in Costume in Performance: Materiality, Culture and the Body.
- Structure of the thesis
Part 1: Costume in Performance and meaning-making methodologies
- Costume histories: monumentalising practices
- Constellations of past and present costumes
- Decolonising costume through the archive
Part 2 Post-colonial feminism and Costume in Performance
- The feminine sublime costume and colonial entanglements
- Legacies of staged harems: female bodies as power acquisition
- Costumed appropriation as emancipation
- Performance costume supporting rapture from oppression
Part 3 New materialist costume
Hybridity, Material-discursive, material-semiotic ethical entanglements
Conclusion:
Productively complicating costume further
Résumé :
This PhD by Publication enables the advancement of the research methodologies and theoretical positions that underpin the development of Costume in Performance: Materiality, Culture and the Body, a book that critically explores potentialities of agency through the ways in which costume, itself, performs. Drawn from selected and interconnected past and contemporary costume-led performances, this thesis addresses how these may account for the capacity to both empower and oppress, focusing on contexts of colonialism and neocolonialism. Engaging in a wider and ongoing process of decolonising of the subject, it brings to bear key transdisciplinary theoretical advances that enable expanding beyond the ideas set out in the book to articulate intersecting ethical entanglements, while building on the implicit feminist, post-colonial position taken by it. In this process it considers costuming as a phenomenon that is critical, active, situated, material, temporal, spatial, in motion and embodied. Placing costume within post-humanist ontologies, I intend to make it an object of feminist, new materialist knowledge, that furthers thinking around performance as much as addresses social and environmental concerns, while offering a myriad of creative possibilities for future ethical interdisciplinary research, practice and pedagogy.
Collection : Bibliothèque de l'École nationale de cirque