ABSTRACT

This volume investigates performance cultures as rich and dynamic environments of knowledge practice through which distinctive epistemologies are continuously (re)generated, cultivated and celebrated. Epistemologies are dynamic formations of rules, tools and procedures not only for understanding but also for doing knowledges.

This volume deals in particular with epistemological challenges posed by practices and processes of interweaving performance cultures. These challenges arise in artistic and academic contexts because of hierarchies between epistemologies. European colonialism worked determinedly, violently and often with devastating effects on instituting and sustaining a hegemony of modern Euro-American rules of knowing in many parts of the world. Therefore, Interweaving Epistemologies critically interrogates the (im)possibilities of interweaving epistemologies in artistic and academic contexts today. Writing from diverse geographical locations and knowledge cultures, the book’s contributors—philosophers and political scientists as well as practitioners and scholars of theater, performance and dance—investigate prevailing forms of epistemic ignorance and violence. They introduce key concepts and theories that enable critique of unequal power relations between epistemologies. Moreover, contributions explore historical cases of interweaving epistemologies and examine innovative present-day methods of working across and through epistemological divides in nonhegemonic, sustainable, creative and critical ways.

Ideal for practitioners, students and researchers of theater, performance and dance, Interweaving Epistemologies emphasizes the urgent need to acknowledge, study and promote epistemological plurality and diversity in practices of performance-making as well as in scholarship on theater and performance around the globe today.

chapter |36 pages

Introduction: Performance cultures as epistemic cultures

Developing inter-epistemic approaches and methodologies

part I|60 pages

Concepts, Theories and Methods

chapter 1|15 pages

The cognitive empire

Epistemic injustices and resurgent decolonization

chapter 3|28 pages

Reconstituting the destituted

How decolonial and de-Western interweaving works

part II|78 pages

Analyzing Inter-Epistemic Performances

chapter 4|32 pages

Confronting the colonial matrix of power

Intersections of interculturality and decoloniality in performance

chapter 5|21 pages

Staging border epistemologies

The crosscultural cartographies of an artwork

chapter 6|23 pages

Performance as method

Critical approaches to the Western episteme

part III|86 pages

Exploring Inter-Epistemic Histories

chapter 7|14 pages

Complex smoking 1

On Brecht, tobacco and bourgeois philosophy

chapter 9|18 pages

Performance or “comportamento”?

Names and epistemologies of performance art

chapter |26 pages

Epilogue: Decolonial aesthetics in theater and performance

Theatrical strategies of delinking