----------empyre- soft-skinned space----------------------

dear all

week 3 is starting up, but first we wish to  thank everyone, and especially our 
guests, who have so actively and incisively contributed to our debate on during 
the first weeks and these past days.

Participating guests included Pier Marton, Jon McKenzie, Reinhold Görling, Yoko 
Ishiguro, Mine Kaylan, and Andreas Philippopoulos-Mihalopoulos, and we have 
heard consistently from others as well who joined the round table --
Alan and I are very grateful for your feedback to each other, and for 
challenging our thinking on matters that ranged widely, last week, and that 
thanks to Pier, but also to the others, for slowly shaping a methodology of 
approaches or a set of concerns that we realize needs addressing, whether it is 
the question of violence  (and ethology of violent behavior amongst members of 
clans, societies, species), or the search for empathy and listening to others, 
whether it is
an ethical and political choice we have to watch ISIS or, rather, the terror of 
executions  -- Leandro asked:  <watch the unwatchable? Are ISIS beheadings 
unwatchable? What do we mean by "unwatchable"? >   – or whether we
are also engaged in practices (beyond-media, performance, activism, altruism, 
criticism, communal work, stilling) that can intimate catharsis, or a form of 
re-performance that may help to work through trauma or through the truth 
finding process antedating reconciliations, or a ceasing.  

I will come back reflecting on last week's discussion soon, trying to cull a 
few important statements from what all of you have shared here, and what 
matters, I think, is that we have heard from numerous people here on this 
fictive roundtable who said that this month's theme matters to them, and to us, 
and that they felt (even if they listened silently) that languages here needed 
to be found, even if, as Andreas pessimistically suggested, we can merely claim 
a kind of self-legitimiising collusion, as share-holders  in circle of 
spectacularities & spectacularisations  (<We are everywhere, fearful observers 
in our blind administration of justice, we belong nowhere but to the vast plain 
of suffering>). These observers are also, if I understood Jon McKenzie, "the 
homo sacer data bodies".....?


Now Alan has introduced Monika Weiss, and I follow up with introducing a few 
more guests for the coming week.

There were some fine, provocative posts coming from Yoko and Mine regarding 
performance practice, and Alan also told us he performed last week, and I just 
returned from performances/rehearsals in Dresden, thus it is with
a sense of both enormous pleasure and nervousness that I introduce some 
colleagues from the theatre who told me that they are caught in midst of 
production, and thus may be overwhelmed, or, as in Rustom's case, may not be 
altogether comfortable or used to the asynchronous flow and speed of this list 
and its discursive customs  (Rustom thus asked me to "encryption" him or the 
theses from his new book on terror and performance into the discussion -- but 
how could I keep his, or Fereshteh's or Hamid's valuable ideas safe? and what 
do I know about encryption?).

please join me in welcoming:



*Aneta Stojnic  is theoretician, artist and curator born in Belgrade 
(Yugoslavia). She is a post-doc researcher at Ghent University, Faculty of Arts 
and Philosophy Research centre S:PAM - Studies in Performing Arts & Media 
(2013/14) and at the Academy of Fine Arts Vienna Conceptual Art study program, 
IBK (starting from January 2015). Aneta's  professional work is characterized 
by strong connection between theory and practice as well as interdisciplinary 
approaches to art practices that affirm critical thinking. She obtained her PhD 
at University of Arts in Belgrade (Interdisciplinary Studies - Theory of Art 
and Media) defending a thesis: “Theory of Performance in Digital Art: Towards 
the New Political Performance". Aneta was Artist in residence in Tanzquartier 
Vienna in 2011, and writer in residence at KulturKontakt Austria in 2012.  She 
has authored a number of international publications on contemporary art and 
media, as well as various artistic and curatorial projects. Stojnic 
collaborated  with institutions and organizations such as: Tanzquartier Wien, 
Open Systems (Vienna), Les Laboratoires d'Aubervillier (Paris), Quartier21 (MQ 
Vienna), Dansens Hus Stockholm, Odin Teatret (Denmark), BITEF Theatre 
(Belgrade), TkH Walking Theory, October Salon (Belgrade), Pančevo Biennal and 
many others.


*Rustom Bharucha is professor of Theatre and Performance Studies at the 
Jawaharlal Nehru University in New Dehli. He is a writer, director, dramaturg 
and cultural critic, as well as the author of several books, including ‘Theatre 
and the World: Performance and the Politics of Culture’ (Routledge, 1993), ‘In 
the Name of the Secular: Contemporary Cultural Activism in Inda” (NewDehli: 
Oxford UP, 1998), ‘The Politics of Cultural Practice: Thinking Through Theatre 
in an Age of Globalization’ (Athlone Press, 2000), and most recently, ‘Terror 
and Performance' (Routledge, 2014). 


*Fereshteh Vaziri Nasab is an Iranian writer, translator and poet. She has 
studied physics and English literature in Iran and received her master degree 
in English language and literature from Azad University of Teheran. After 
graduation, she started teaching English literature at university and till her 
immigration to Germany in 2001 she worked as a lecturer at different 
universities. She wrote her dissertation under the title “Towards 
Delogocentrism: A Study of the Dramatic Works of Samuel Beckett, Tom Stoppard 
and Caryl Churchill” at Goethe University in Frankfurt and taught contemporary 
English drama for two semesters at Frankfurt. Her first artistic experience was 
playing a role in a performance of Brecht’s Mother Courage and her Chidren in 
1979.  Later she played in six other plays including “The Night Thoreau Spent 
in Jail” and “The shadow of a Gunman” by Sean O’Casey. She has also translated 
three plays, Great God Brown by Eugene O’Neill, Awake and sing by Clifford 
Odets and Educating Rita by Willy Russell from English into Persian. In 
addition, she has written  articles, on “Postmodernism and Theater” and “Ibsen 
and Idealism” for Iranian theater Journals. She founded “Kerman Theater 
Society” together with Behzad Ghaderi and Yadolah Aghaabasi in 1990. She has 
also written and translated many articles, short stories, and poems which have 
been published in literary magazines such as Tasian, Piade ro, Shahrgan and 
Kandu, and she worked as an editor for online magazines Kandu and Shearane. In 
Germany, she lectured on “Hegemonic Notions of Faith Versus Liberality of 
Literature in Iranian Nights” and “Transcultural Identity in  GoliTaraghi’s 
Short Story “Wolf Lady” at Bamberg University. Two collections of poem, one her 
own poetry and the other a translation of German poets were recently published, 
and her new play, “Heimatland war kein mitnehmbares Veilchen”, which she 
directed for an Iranian theater ensemble, premiered at the Iranian Theater 
Festival in Cologne in November 2014. 


*Hamed Taheri, born in 1975 in Iran, the son of the poor teacher and radical 
leftist militant Ahmad Taheri and the young woman MAMA who suffered from a 
neurotic disease after the revolution in Iran.  He writes, "That devastating 
spasm in he tongue, jaw, face and powerless doctors in the face of this blocked 
mouth. Electro-shock therapy; She was on the electro-shock chair, jolted by the 
electric shocks, and screamed.  The mouth refused to open. There are guests who 
enter through a door underneath this image as a suspended sign that sways in 
the breeze, a door behind which I practice my T H E A T R E."  Hamed wrote and 
directed the acclaimed ‘Home is in our Past’ (2008), ‘The Tongues and the 
Mouths” (play for 27 tongues without mouth, 11 mouths without tongue and an 
Echo)[2008), and numerous other texts. Currently he is busy directing his first 
film.
Website:  http://www.wnmf2006.de/




warm regards
Johannes Birringer 



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