ABSTRACT

This volume brings together important work at the intersection of politics and performance studies. While the languages of theatre and performance have long been deployed by other disciplines, these are seldom deployed seriously and pursued systematically to discover the actual nature of the relationship between performance as a set of behavioural practices and the forms and the transactions of these other disciplines.

This book investigates the structural similarities and features of politics and performance, which are referred to here as ‘grammar’, a concept which also emphasizes the common communicational base or language of these fields. In each of the chapters included in this collection, key processes of both politics and performance are identified and analyzed, demonstrating the critical and indivisible links between the fields. The book also underlines that neither politics nor performance can take place without actors who perform and spectators who receive, evaluate and react to these actions. At the heart of the project is the ambition to bring about a paradigm change, such that politics cannot be analyzed seriously without a sophisticated understanding of its performance. All the chapters here display a concrete set of events, practices, and contexts within which politics and performance are inseparable elements.

This work will be of great interest to students and scholars in both International Relations and Performance Studies.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

chapter |15 pages

Performing democracy

Roles, stages, scripts

chapter |16 pages

‘I am an American'

Protesting advertised ‘Americanness'

chapter |13 pages

Characterization and systemic gender violence

The example of Laundry and the figure of the mother in Irish culture

chapter |13 pages

Theatricality vs. bare life

Performance as a vernacular of resistance

chapter |13 pages

Becoming a democratic audience

chapter |13 pages

Tahrir Square, EC4M

The Occupy movement and the dramaturgy of public order

chapter |14 pages

Temporality, politics and performance

Missing, displaced, disappeared

chapter |14 pages

Performance and politics

Ceremony and ritual in Parliament1

chapter |21 pages

Bringing the audience back in

Kenya's Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission and the efficacy of public hearings

chapter |15 pages

Betrayal and what follows

Rituals of repentance, healing and anger in response to the church sexual abuse scandal in Ireland

chapter |19 pages

Closet grammars of intentional deception

The logic of lies, state security and homosexual panic in cold war politics

chapter |9 pages

Afterword

Sovereign and critical grammars