Site specific performance and the mechanics of becoming social

PhD thesis


Fossey, S. 2018. Site specific performance and the mechanics of becoming social. PhD thesis Middlesex University School of Media and Performing Arts
TypePhD thesis
TitleSite specific performance and the mechanics of becoming social
AuthorsFossey, S.
Abstract

This thesis offers a body of practice that includes video documentation of one to one performances, performance lectures, critical writings and first person reflective narratives that give new insights into the potential of site-specific performance art and social space. Key themes, questions and concerns across performance studies and the social sciences are explored through a practice as research trajectory. From performance studies Nick Kaye’s (2000) writing on site-specificity provides a point of departure for methods of making and writing about performance that I refer to as ‘mechanics’; the term mechanics is posited within a process of what is described in the thesis as ‘becoming social’ and articulates a sense of what social scientist Doreen Massey might describe as ‘throwntogetherness’ (Massey, 2005). Anthropologist Marc Augé’s (1995) concerns around the prevalence of non-place are challenged and interwoven with Massey’s optimistic calls for spatial rethinking to answer the key research question: how can becoming social be framed as a site-specific process when realised through particular performance mechanics? The thesis speaks broadly to this question whilst exploring subthemes, questions and concepts. The confessional potential of body language (Howells, 2011) is explored as personal histories are exchanged between strangers in an exploration of ‘autobiographical’ (Heddon, 2010) performance that encourages the materialisation of what psychologist Charles Fernyhough (2016) refers to as the voices within. Interrelationality, intimacy, proximity, place and social space are explored, with concepts of hosting, caretaking and hospitality mobilised in performance materials that are both positioned as experiments and research findings. These findings give new insights into performance art and offer a timely alternative way of becoming social that performs and practices space as a ‘simultaneity of stories-so-far’ (Massey, 2005: 9).

Department nameSchool of Media and Performing Arts
Institution nameMiddlesex University
Publication dates
Print14 Feb 2018
Publication process dates
Deposited14 Feb 2018
Accepted29 Jan 2018
Output statusPublished
Accepted author manuscript
Additional information

The video documentation accompanying this thesis is not stored on this repository but is available on request from the author.

LanguageEnglish
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https://repository.mdx.ac.uk/item/87734

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Accepted author manuscript
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