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artWork: Art, Labour and Activism explores the complexity of the relation between art, labour and activism from both an academic and an actors’ perspective.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Preface/Introduction/ 1. Reimaging, Reimagining, or Reimagineering: Rebranding Ulster, Sarah Feinstein and Sheelagh Colclough/ 2. Art, Activism, and Addressing Sexual Assault in the UK: A Case Study, Winnie M Li/ 3. Macao before and beyond social media: the creation of the unexpected as a mobilisation logic, Alberto Cossu and Maria Francesca Murru/ 4. The Political Value of Techno-future, Emanuele Braga/ 5. Changing the Narrative: Highlighting Workers' Rights in Environmental Art Activism, Paula Serafini/ 6. Working Dancers; contemporary dance activism in Argentina, Konstantina Bousmpoura and Julia Martinez Heimann/ 7. Making Art Relevant in the Aftermath of the Egyptian Uprising, Rounwah Bseiso/ 8. Collective art-making to agitate for social change: Liberate Tate in parallel with The Wooster Group, Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp, Forced Entertainment, La Pocha Nostra, Climate Camp and Occupy Wall Street, Mel Evans/ 9. Embracing failure, educating hope: some arts activist educators' concerns in their wo
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Paula Serafini is a Research Associate at CAMEo Research Institute for Cultural and Media Economies, University of Leicester.Jessica Holtaway is a PhD candidate in the Department of Visual Cultures at Goldsmiths College, University of London.William David Hart is the Margaret W. Harmon Professor of Religious Studies at Macalester College.
Zusammenfassung
artWork: Art, Labour and Activism explores the complexity of the relation between art, labour and activism from both an academic and an actors’ perspective.