ABSTRACT

Politics as Public Art presents a keystone collection that pursues new frameworks for a critical understanding of the relationship between public art and protest movements through the utilization of socially engaged and choreopolitical approaches.

This anthology draws from a unique combination of interdisciplinary scholarship and activism where it integrates geographically rich perspectives from political and grassroots community contexts spanning the United States, Europe, Australia, and Southeastern Africa. The volume questions, and reimagines, not only how public art practice can be integral to politics, including forms of surveillance and control of bodily movement. It also probes into how political participation itself can be construed as a form of public artmaking for radical social change and just worlds. This collection advocates for scholar-activist inquiry into how socially engaged public art practices can pave the way for thinking through—and working toward—championing more inclusive futures and, as such, choreographing greater intersectional justice.

This book provides a wide appeal to audiences across humanities and social science scholarship, arts practice, and activism seeking conceptual and empirically informed tools for moving from public art and choreopolitical theory into modes of praxis: critical reflection and action.

part |17 pages

Preamble

chapter 1|15 pages

Politics as Public Art

Bodies, Power, Inclusive Change

part I|56 pages

The Art of Political Movements

chapter 2|5 pages

Introduction

Emotions, Materiality, and World-Building

chapter 3|17 pages

A Beautiful Disruption

Extinction Rebellion's Red [Rebel] Brigade and a Theory of Emotional Representation in Protest

chapter 5|18 pages

Art-Making and World-Building

Arendt and the Political Potential of Socially Engaged Practices

part II|58 pages

Bodies in Space

chapter 6|5 pages

Introduction

Political Praxis, Ideology, and the Deliberately Aesthetic Body

chapter 7|14 pages

Bloodied Beaches, Copper Flowers

A Choreopolitical Analysis of Extinction Rebellion's Red Rebel Brigade

chapter 8|20 pages

“Racism Lives Here”

Queering the Neoliberal University Campus through Choreopolitical Antiracist Activism

part |4 pages

Epilogue