Ten Theses on Touch, or, Writing Touch | Hypatia Vourloumis
Touch 1. To write on touch is to recognize that one is touching and being touched.
In its seeking to philosophize the feel, to paraphrase Stefano Harney and Fred Moten on hapticality and love, this experimental exercise necessarily comes to understand itself as a performance of touching rather than a text about touching
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On Making Haptic Drawings & Accordion Fold Books | Stephen Vincent
I listen to my now late mother breathing. She’s 93. She is taking an afternoon nap in her bedroom. I am in the "family room" making this haptic. The sounds of her breathing are projected over the speaker on the audio-surveillance system.
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Chronophilia/Chronophobia | Maryam Monalisa Gharavi
Chronophilia/Chronophobia emerged from a poem/script that I wrote blindfolded. It loosely experiments with surrealist automatic writing practices, the use and subversion of meditative ritual, histories of labor, and critical theories of the attention economy.
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Other Sensualities | Rizvana Bradley
One of the problems with time-based endurance performances like my crawl works is they have this marvelous creamy nougat center operating inside the performer, and this space is unfortunately not available in the images and mythologies that surround the work. So, typically, the surface of the work becomes the life of the work.
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Critical intimacies: hip hop as queer feminist pedagogy | Jessica N. Pabón & Shanté Paradigm Smalls
Sitting in La MaMa's Ellen Stewart Theatre, we listened carefully, watched closely, responded vocally, and were ultimately mesmerized by the participants at the “Women of the 5th Element” performing at the first American Human Beatboxing Festival organized by beatrhymer Kid Lucky in May 2011.
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The June Tyson Sessions: remixperiments with vocal materiality and the becoming-woman of cosmic music | Nick Bazzano
In A Thousand Plateaus, Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari develop a concept of the artist as not one who seeks to represent the world, or even to express or perform her soul or subjectivity, but as a “cosmic artisan” – an arranger and forecaster of a cosmic-people-to-come, a performative conduit through which intensive cosmic events continue and extend outward.
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Nicki-aesthetics: the camp performance of Nicki Minaj | Uri McMillan
Nicki Minaj – former American Idol judge and three-time Grammy nominee (including Best New Artist) – has for a half-decade defied expectations of what a black female rapper should be, and in the process has single-handedly expanded the roles that someone like her can inhabit and perform.
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Laughing with Katherine Cooper and Antonia Baehr
I met Antonia Baehr at the Abrons Art Center—a place that has always reminded me of a very friendly Soviet fortress. Baehr was about to perform her piece “Laugh,” a solo performance which explores the act of laughter, that evening as part of the Queer New York International Festival.
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Dis-Assembly Lines: gestures, situations, and surveillances | Alex Pittman
Here is a familiar scene: it is the fall of 1952 and Lucy Ricardo and her neighbor Ethel Mertz are at work on the assembly line of a chocolate factory.1 Having proved incompetent to other tasks in the factory's production cycle, the women now occupy one of its final positions...
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Situating precarity between the body and the commons | Tavia Nyong'o
It is a mark of the acceleration with which ideas now circulate that the two years since this special issue of Women and Performance was first floated, “precarity” has crossed over from the European and Latin American Left to the United States.
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All Light’s Fragments: A Conversation with the artist MPA | Katherine Brewer Ball
The artist MPA uses her body to explore the aesthetics and tactics of resistance. Her work has shown internationally, from New York to Stockholm to Oaxaca, and she has collaborated with artists including Sadie Benning, Leidy Churchman, Katherine Hubbard, and Emily Roysdon.
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Other forms of conviviality | Park McArthur and Constantina Zavitsanos
SCORE FOR BEFORE Think about the evening during the day. Text about when and where. Be there when and where.
Care collective is a group of 10 people who coordinate Park McArthur's nightly care routine.
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Introduction: We are Born in Flames | Craig Willse and Dean Spade
The plans for this special dossier on Lizzie Borden's 1983 film Born in Flames first emerged following a screening of the film organized in April 2010 by the Queer/Film/Art series in New York.1 We attended the screening together–it was Craig's first viewing, and Dean's first in many years–
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