Italian contemporary circus in a neoliberal scenario : artistic labour, embodied knowledge, and responsible selfhood
Auteurs : Bessone, Ilaria (Auteur)
Lieu de publication : Italie
Date de publication : 2017
Université : Università degli studi di Milano
Programme d'étude : Scienze sociali e politiche
Cycle d'étude : Doctorat
Langue : Anglais
Description : 321 p. ; 28 cm.
Notes : Bibliogr. : p. 293-311
Résumé :
This  thesis  investigates  the  social  and  bodily  underpinnings  of  contemporary  circus 
practices,  and  their  embeddedness  within  post-Fordist  reconfigurations  of  art,  work, leisure and the body. As such, it focuses on the nexus between the recent transformations of the modes of practicing and consuming circus and broader social changes, and on the processes and meanings involved in the embodiment of circus-specific body techniques. As well as a pioneer work in what might be called the ‘sociology of circus’, the thesis engages with affirmed and broadly known bodies of work and theoretical debates, having its main contributions in the areas of cultural sociology, the sociology of the body and the emotions, and qualitative methodology of social research.  
The research takes the northern Italian city of Turin as a significant case study, and draws on the exploration of formal institutions and modes of organisation within contemporary circus as an artistic field under construction in Italy, and of the meanings, representations and definitions of circus as a community of practice. It focuses on the many forms acquired by circus careers today, on the practical understanding entailed in circus practice, and on how it is acquired. Data were generated mainly between January 2015 and March 2016 through document analysis, participant  observation  (and observant participation),  shadowing,  in-depth interviews, object, photo and video elicitation, and – due to my position as an insider within the community of circus practice - autoethnographic analysis. The  identification  of  internal  and  external boundaries  to  the  contemporary  circus community  provides  a  first  research  outcome.  Other  important  findings  concern  the interplay  between  heteronomous  and  autonomous  principles  in  the  process  of construction of a circus field, and the centrality of risk in circus practices. If physical risk has been  a characteristic  of  the  circus  since  its  origins,  new  forms  of  risk  –  artistic, entrepreneurial, and narcissistic – deeply affect the careers and learning processes of contemporary circus practitioners. This has important implications at the level of adequate presentations of self, of body and emotion work, and of emotional labour performed to 
realize and demonstrate authentic, responsible selfhood. 
Finally, this study confirms the ‘disenchanting effects’ of sociological research, especially 
when  conducted  by  a  full  member  of  the  researched  group.  Highlighting  subcultural 
meanings  previously taken  for  granted  implied a  normalization  of  such  meanings  and 
practices.  Wearing  the  sociologist’s  glasses  means  focusing  on  power  relations, 
heteronomous forces, and typical, rather than unique, dynamics of interaction. Circus in 
this light appears as a normal quest for meaning rather than an exceptional quest for 
sensation. [author summary]
Collection : Bibliothèque de l'École nationale de cirque
Localisation : Traitement documentaire B