THE INTERPLAY PERFORMANCE PRACTICE: PLAY AND SOCIAL CHANGE IN LATE CAPITALISM
Contribuinte(s) |
Frederik, Laurie Digital Repository at the University of Maryland University of Maryland (College Park, Md.) Theatre |
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Data(s) |
22/06/2016
22/06/2016
2016
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Resumo |
Practitioners of the performance form “InterPlay” utilize dance, storytelling and song to build community and generate social change. I elucidate how this community of practitioners conceptualizes “social change.” I argue that the InterPlay social movement organizes around the application of play to performances of self in everyday life. I explore how the InterPlay non-profit corporation, Body Wisdom Inc., employs this technique to address racial justice in its organizational practices. I also examine how practitioners understand their use of this performance play in places of work, concluding that—even in these endeavors—they see social change as a process immanent to both individual people and the systems they create, not as the intervention of an autonomous external power. Ultimately, I argue that, within late capitalism, play should no longer be conceptualized as an activity separate from everyday sociality but as an immanent process of change constitutive of a socioaesthetic domain. |
Identificador |
doi:10.13016/M2FB7S |
Idioma(s) |
en |
Palavras-Chave | #Theater #Performing arts #Organizational behavior #InterPlay #Play #Social Movement #Theatre for Social Change #Theatre of the Oppressed #Work |
Tipo |
Thesis |