Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects

This short essay introduces the Our Dance Democracy (ODD) project (2018–present) and the contributions to this Forum Kritika, “Dancing Democracy in a Fractured World.” The latter includes articles, provocations, and creative responses in visual and poetic forms. Dance is an art form positioned betwe...

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Main Authors: Merriman, Victor, Black-Frizell, Sarah
Format: text
Published: Archīum Ateneo 2024
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss40/5
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2015/viewcontent/KK_2040_2C_202023_205_20Forum_20Kritika_20on_20Dancing_20Democracy_20in_20a_20Fractured_20World_20__20Merriman_20and_20Black_Frizell.pdf
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id ph-ateneo-arc.kk-2015
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.kk-20152024-12-19T05:36:02Z Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects Merriman, Victor Black-Frizell, Sarah This short essay introduces the Our Dance Democracy (ODD) project (2018–present) and the contributions to this Forum Kritika, “Dancing Democracy in a Fractured World.” The latter includes articles, provocations, and creative responses in visual and poetic forms. Dance is an art form positioned between artists and audiences, on one hand, and institutional structures— including funding regimes and performance venues—on the other. As state and civil society infrastructure experiences pressure arising from neoliberal political economy and the exacerbating effects of the global COVID-19 pandemic, dance-makers experience increasingly burdensome conditions as artists, citizens, and human beings. Choreography itself emerges as a zone of contested meaning as the word migrates from the studio to the boardroom, and shared precarity and common-ground politicized identities both constellate, and distinguish from each other, creative practitioners in the Global North and the Global South. The role of the West as bearer of the taxonomic gaze is foregrounded, not only as experienced, historically, by colonialized Others, but by citizens of liberal democracies. As a process of critical questioning, testing the elasticity of boundaries to thought and action, Dance practices may well constitute examples of human flourishing without which the enduring promises of democracy cannot be realized. 2024-12-19T06:08:30Z text application/pdf https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss40/5 info:doi/10.13185/1656-152x.2015 https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2015/viewcontent/KK_2040_2C_202023_205_20Forum_20Kritika_20on_20Dancing_20Democracy_20in_20a_20Fractured_20World_20__20Merriman_20and_20Black_Frizell.pdf Kritika Kultura Archīum Ateneo bureaucracy choreography Creative Industries dance democracy home human flourishing identity nation
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic bureaucracy
choreography
Creative Industries
dance
democracy
home
human flourishing
identity
nation
spellingShingle bureaucracy
choreography
Creative Industries
dance
democracy
home
human flourishing
identity
nation
Merriman, Victor
Black-Frizell, Sarah
Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
description This short essay introduces the Our Dance Democracy (ODD) project (2018–present) and the contributions to this Forum Kritika, “Dancing Democracy in a Fractured World.” The latter includes articles, provocations, and creative responses in visual and poetic forms. Dance is an art form positioned between artists and audiences, on one hand, and institutional structures— including funding regimes and performance venues—on the other. As state and civil society infrastructure experiences pressure arising from neoliberal political economy and the exacerbating effects of the global COVID-19 pandemic, dance-makers experience increasingly burdensome conditions as artists, citizens, and human beings. Choreography itself emerges as a zone of contested meaning as the word migrates from the studio to the boardroom, and shared precarity and common-ground politicized identities both constellate, and distinguish from each other, creative practitioners in the Global North and the Global South. The role of the West as bearer of the taxonomic gaze is foregrounded, not only as experienced, historically, by colonialized Others, but by citizens of liberal democracies. As a process of critical questioning, testing the elasticity of boundaries to thought and action, Dance practices may well constitute examples of human flourishing without which the enduring promises of democracy cannot be realized.
format text
author Merriman, Victor
Black-Frizell, Sarah
author_facet Merriman, Victor
Black-Frizell, Sarah
author_sort Merriman, Victor
title Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
title_short Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
title_full Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
title_fullStr Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
title_full_unstemmed Weights and Pressures: Precarity and Democracy's Legislative Subjects
title_sort weights and pressures: precarity and democracy's legislative subjects
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2024
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/kk/vol1/iss40/5
https://archium.ateneo.edu/context/kk/article/2015/viewcontent/KK_2040_2C_202023_205_20Forum_20Kritika_20on_20Dancing_20Democracy_20in_20a_20Fractured_20World_20__20Merriman_20and_20Black_Frizell.pdf
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