We are proud to announce the publication of Vol. 2, Iss. 1 of PARtake: The Journal of Performance as Research.
This general issue is titled “Expanding the Field: Philosophy / Action / Activism”
You may access the journal at https://www.partakejournal.org.
Articles and authors include:
Promenade Locale: Walking Practice as Performance
Georgia Snowball, Federation University Australia
The Flâneuse in the Virtual City: Exploring “Lost Angeles”
Zena Bibler, University of California Los Angeles
I, Thou, and the Sphere Between: Reflections on Dancing Difference in One Direction
Hannah S. Schwadron, Florida State University
Speculative Performance Meets Immersive Learning: Lessons of Drylab2023
Adriene Jenik, Arizona State University
Writing the Collaborative Process: Measure (Still) for Measure, Shakespeare, and Rape Culture
Nora J. Williams, Independent Scholar
Toward a Workshop in Theatre Phenomenology
Daniel W. Johnston, Sheffield Hallam University, U.K.
A Review Essay: Rendering “Staging Wittgenstein”
Rebecca Warzer, New York University
This general issue is titled “Expanding the Field: Philosophy / Action / Activism”
You may access the journal at https://www.partakejournal.org.
Articles and authors include:
Promenade Locale: Walking Practice as Performance
Georgia Snowball, Federation University Australia
The Flâneuse in the Virtual City: Exploring “Lost Angeles”
Zena Bibler, University of California Los Angeles
I, Thou, and the Sphere Between: Reflections on Dancing Difference in One Direction
Hannah S. Schwadron, Florida State University
Speculative Performance Meets Immersive Learning: Lessons of Drylab2023
Adriene Jenik, Arizona State University
Writing the Collaborative Process: Measure (Still) for Measure, Shakespeare, and Rape Culture
Nora J. Williams, Independent Scholar
Toward a Workshop in Theatre Phenomenology
Daniel W. Johnston, Sheffield Hallam University, U.K.
A Review Essay: Rendering “Staging Wittgenstein”
Rebecca Warzer, New York University
A limit to the applicability of this sort of “research, is that people are self aware. Hence adjust their behavior based on feedback they receive from others. And, self awareness is, in and of itself, a fitness signal. Corollarily, while everyone is subject to marketing along the article”s lines; those who are most so, tend to be those least self aware, hence least “fit, hence least able to recognize how laughably predictable they appear by going all in on a very base drive. Which is where the stereotype about how everyone driving sports cars are compensating, arises from. Effectively limiting how much of a “benefit a Porsche really provides. Anecdotally, based on “research performed on undergrad UCLA hotties, as long as a middle aged guy dolls himself up sufficiently to leave some doubt that he just may still be in his thirties (40 seems to be a bit of a universal eeehw-creepy line in the sand amongst the undergrad set), the ST would more often than not trump the Bentley for half-their-own-age punters. Simply because the latter plays to the old-and-compensating stereotype. While “flashy Sport Compacts are more likely to be associated with 20 and 30 somethings of a carefree persuasion; Which a 20 year old wouldn”t feel the need to explain away to her clique.
Thanks Sharmila:)