49 research outputs found

    Over precariteit, precariaat en andere postfordistische begrippen

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    Chasing your own tail : the inclusive artist's process in project-based contemporary dance

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    In 1996, Maurizio Lazzarato defined the concept of immaterial labour as the kind of labour that produces the informational and cultural content of the commodity. The production cycle of this kind of labour is not defined by the factory walls, but happens in society.1Building on this idea, I argue that the artist’s production process does not happen between the studio walls alone, but should be considered as a more inclusive notion happening in society. The contemporary dance artist in Europe performs immaterial labour on a flexible basis within the context of temporary projects, a situation that also demands persistent networking in order to ascertain future work opportunities. For this article, it is my intention to broaden the notion of the artist’s process and approach it from a more inclusive perspective. To fully understand creative processes today and how they are deeply interwoven with our neoliberal economy, I will concentrate on the connection between the microworld of the creative process in European contemporary dance, the mesoworld of the funded dance institutions, and the macroworld on the larger social, economic, and political level

    Mayday, Mayday, Mayday! Moving from European discourses on the precarious and art to the realities of contemporary dance

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    In this article, we encapsulate several key debates in sociology, cultural and arts politics and the media industry on precarious work since its emergence at the turn of the twenty-first century. After setting out the fundamental discourses on precarity, we concentrate on contemporary dance artists as precarious workers and investigate the extent to which different levels of precarity affect them, distinguishing relevant aspects related to socio-economic, mental and physical precarity. We propose that the nature of their work is integrally connected with the 'precarious'. To close, we conclude that protest against precarity itself is of a precarious nature
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