Issue Details: First known date: 2020... 2020 Shared Bodies : Dramaturgies Of/for Listening and Hearing
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'PROLOGUE Whitefella says: 'Now I want you to condense 70,000 years of ancestral lineage, of continuous culture and creative practice, of complex totemic, skin and ceremonial systems complicated by 229 years of colonisation, survival, government and social policy that continues to actively oppress your peoples and sovereignty into a two-minute elevator pitch or marketing blurb, but make it exciting and make it accessible'.1 *·· Rachael Swain's recently released book, Dance in Contested Land: New Intercultural Dramaturgies (Palgrave, 2020), coincides with the twenty-fifth anniversary of the Broome-based, internationally renowned Indigenous and intercultural contemporary dance company, Marrugeku. At first, the Sun King wanted to dance and the society of the spectacle was born, long before Guy Debord put it in a book; then 'pointes' took us to the skies and when we came back to the floor, Westerners scattered spectacle around the globe. Later, we got excited relearning to walk and ran outside of the theatre and we wrote manifestos to say 'no' to virtuosity, to moving and being moved, to glamour and transcendence, then 'yes' to conceptualising experience, affects and sensations, 'yes' to non-sense and illogics, and more recently, 'why not' to dancing on walls and roofs, in museums, in text, on screen or not at all.6 And as we moved from postmodern to non-dance to post dance to danses ďauteur, during the late 1980s - 1990s, the global interest in dance as idea, practice and product grew to be so impressive that it resulted in a surge of dedicated dance venues, festivals and infrastructure to create and present dance. In the undeniable process of intellectualisation (theory and praxis), contemporary dance took a somewhat narcissistic turn in its processes of 'self-isation'8 even as it expanded notions of choreography - the politics and critique of representation, authorship, agency, trans-individuation, queerness, and labour - to focus on 'expressive concepts that desubjectivise and disobjectivise relations between movement, body and time'. The dramaturgies that accompanied these intellectual dance meanderings have also evolved.' (Publication abstract)

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    y separately published work icon Australasian Drama Studies Regional Theatre in Australia no. 77 October 2020 21039143 2020 periodical issue

    'The inquiry came on the back of an effective shutdown of most work in the creative sector as a result of social distancing restrictions and lockdowns imposed in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in March, and of extensive debate about the Australian Government's reluctance to offer a dedicated financial support package to an industry that, by the government's own estimates, contributed $111.7 billion in 2016/17, or 6.4 per cent of GDP. The terms of reference for the inquiry appeared accordingly broad: 'The Committee will inquire into Australia's creative and cultural industries and institutions including, but not limited to, Indigenous, regional, rural and community based organisations'. More broadly, the frustrations of lockdown, a newfound capacity to work remotely, loss of income, and the more general reassessment of life choices and lifestyle that COVID-19 provoked all resulted in an unprecedented net population loss in Australia's big cities, with an October 2020 Ipsos poll finding that one in ten Melburnians were considering a move to regional Victoria. Meanwhile, among the very limited federal stimulus offered to the arts in the early months of the pandemic was a $27 million 'Targeted Support' package in April, which directed $10 million to the music industry, $7 million to Indigenous arts, and $10 million 'to help regional artists and organisations develop new work and explore new delivery models'. In short, while COVID-19 has arguably reconfigured the Australian arts landscape, and the ways in which we understand where arts happens, it also made visible changes that were already occurring, particularly outside major metropolitan centres. Recommendation 1 was that 'the Federal Government increase its investment in building enabling infrastructure to improve connectivity, key services and amenity through coordinated regional plans', while Recommendation 13 anticipated further work on 'the cultivation of social, cultural and community capital'.5 This initiative built in turn on existing trends. Australia's enormous size continues to present major practical challenges when it comes to touring on the one hand, or building and sustaining arts infrastructure on the other. [...]the high-profile shift in the funding narrative over 2020 towards the regions, as well as the obligatory pivot towards the digital environment, has not entirely done away with a metropolitan funding bias, which is most apparent in the fact that the city-based Major Performing Arts organisations receive a disproportionate amount of the federal funding pie.' (Editorial introduction)

    2020
    pg. 320-334, 378-379
Last amended 2 Feb 2021 09:47:32
320-334, 378-379 Shared Bodies : Dramaturgies Of/for Listening and Hearingsmall AustLit logo Australasian Drama Studies
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