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CONFIDING.
- Format:
- Book
- Author/Creator:
- Beeds
- Series:
- The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge ; 15
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Archives.
- Arts--Study and teaching.
- Cosmology.
- Ecology.
- Public art.
- Sociology.
- Art Pedagogy.
- Genre:
- Periodicals
- Periodicals.
- Physical Description:
- 1 online resource.
- Place of Publication:
- Blackwood Gallery, 2023.
- [Place of publication not identified], Blackwood Gallery, 2023.
- Summary:
- "What brings you here? Tucked in this broadsheet, you'll find a postcard with a link to our first readership survey. With this milestone fifteenth issue, CONFIDING, we're hoping to learn more from SDUK readers-what resonates with you, what draws you in to each issue (or doesn't), and what might inform our future issues. Appropriately, this issue addresses trust and collaboration: the tools, methods, and strategies collaborators use to build mutual confidence while working together. With an international slate of largely coauthored contributions, this issue models forms of experimental and collaborative authorship through letters, exercises, interviews, oral histories, and more. Our survey asks: Where are you located? Contributors to this issue pose this question-in its most expansive sense-to con- sider how individuals' positionality affects their working methods. The Post-Film Collective, whose members include "refugees, asylum seekers, sans-papiers, documented citizens," shares a letter exchange that sheds light on how they work together across difference (p. 14). For quori theodor (p. 23), similar considerations are taken up at the dinner table, where new shared experiences are occasioned by dining together. If confiding hinges on trust and vulnerability, readers with an interest in the performing arts might wonder: How to build trust and consent in performance? For Jess Watkin, disability dramaturgy serves as a welcome intervention to rethink the relationships between performer, stage, and audience in the theatre (p. 10). Describing his work with Partnering Lab, Ilya Vidrin theorizes the "thresholds of resistance" that mediate physical contact by dancers and movement artists-and how these negotiations shape interactions beyond the stage (p. 4)..."-- provided by distributor.
- Notes:
- Standard Copyright.
- Archived and cataloged by Library Stack
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