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The Hemispheric Institute of Performance and
Politics
is a consortium of institutions,
artists, and scholars dedicated to exploring
the relationship between expressive behavior (broadly construed as
performance) and social and political life in the Americas.
The program draws on the emerging discipline of Performance Studies to
foster intellectual and artistic relationships across boundaries of
geography, institutions, languages, and academic disciplines.
The Hemispheric Institute is funded by grants from the Ford Foundation and
Rockefeller Foundation
and administered by the Department of
Performance Studies,
Tisch School of the Arts at New York University in New York City.
Why Performance Studies?
Performance Studies combines anthropology, performing arts and cultural
studies, using an interdisciplinary lens to examine a range of social
acts: rituals, festivals, theatre, dance, sports, and other live events.
Performance Studies offers a mode of critical inquiry that can illuminate
cultural practices across cultures, from the aesthetics of everyday life
to the complex social movements of our times.
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Performance and Politics
Studying performance in its myriad manifestations (as act, as masquerade,
as intervention), scholars and artists can analyze the ways in which
performance is used to communicate social or religious values, to elicit
identification, or to forge a sense of community. But politics itself also
provides a rich arena for performance analysis: electoral politics,
populism, protest movements, military parades, and mass rallies are just a
few of the spectacles that can be best analyzed using a performative lens.
The Institute thus explores the ways in which performance and politics
are mutually formative: performance as a practice of politics, politics as
a mode of performance.
Hemispheric View
The Hemispheric Institute aims to provide a model for academic study that
is specially suited to the study of performance in the Americas. The
interdisciplinary focus on performance avoids some of the ethnocentric
limitations inherent in traditional theatre and dance studies, enabling
students to focus on expressive forms that fall outside the bounds of
European performance genres. The Institute hopes not only to look beyond
these disciplinary limits which a long colonial history has imposed, but
to illuminate the ways in which much theatre, dance, and music in the
Americas has been tied from the outset to the history of colonialism
itself. Studying cultural and political performances across the Americas
offers scholars and artists a better understanding of the many shared
histories and practices in the Americas that defy national borders.
Research and Development
The Hemispheric Institute is developing four primary areas of research
into the field of performance and politics in the Americas: 1) Performance
and Politics; 2) Conquest and Colonialism; 3) Memory, Atrocity, and
Representation; and 4) Globalization, Migration, and the Public Sphere,
as described in greater detail below.
To develop each area of research we will organize (1) a web-based
Hemispheric Course or (2) a summer Seminar in Latin America. Ideally, we
will organize both a course and a seminar for each area. For the latter
two areas, we will offer a course in the Fall, and a corresponding
seminar the following summer.
The web-based course will allow students at member institutions to study
the subject in depth, and will enable us to make key texts in that area
available as part of the Institute's web-based archive. At present,
participating institutions in the web course are: the Department of
Performance Studies at New York University; the School of Drama at the
University of Rio de Janeiro, Brasil; and the Department of Communications
at Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú in Lima.
The summer Seminars-two-week intensive programs held in different sites in
Latin America-will allow for intensive focus on a more narrowly defined
topic as suggested by the site and by the particular research interests of
seminar participants. At present, we have scheduled seminars in Rio de
Janeiro, Brasil (2000), Lima, Perú (2001), and hope to plan the
2002 seminar in
Mexico City.
Areas of Research
- PERFORMANCE AND POLITICS
addresses the methodological and theoretical tools offered by the emerging
interdisciplinary field of Performance Studies to address issues of
political and social change in Latin America.
Hemispheric Course: Spring 2000
Annual Seminar: Brazil 2000
- CONQUEST AND COLONIALISM
addresses the methodological and theoretical tools offered by the emerging
interdisciplinary field of Performance Studies to address issues of
political and social change in Latin America.
Hemispheric Course: Fall 1999
Annual Seminar: Brazil 2000
- MEMORY, ATROCITY AND REPRESENTATION
focuses on performance modes as a means of transmitting cultural memory
and as a strategy for political intervention.
Hemispheric Course: Fall 2000
Annual Seminar: Mexico 2001
- GLOBALIZATION, MIGRATION, AND THE PUBLIC SPHERE
will examine performances of national identity, citizenship, language, and
cultural heritage as they cross boundaries in the Americas through
migration, exile, and other socially-motivated issues. How do dramas of
nation-ness and identity tie into other p erformances-economic, global,
and cultural-of which they are also a part? The NYU/Mexico course offering
will focus specifically on the cultural formation of 'Mexican' and
'Mexican-American' and 'Chicana/o' through the examination of public space
in both Mexico and the U.S. The courses offered in Brazil and Peru might
explore similar issues of migration, displacement, and continuity in the
context of Afro- or indigenous populations.
Hemispheric Course: Fall 2001
Annual Seminar: Peru 2002
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