Politics as Public Art

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activist scholarship
Anti-Austerity Protest
Australian Urban Contexts
Black Student Activists
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choreopolitics
Critical Dance Studies
CRPD
Dialogic Art
Disability Protest
Disabled Australians
Dugout Canoe
embodied political action
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Everyday Public Space
Ferguson Protesters
Genre Public Art
International Monetary Fund
intersectional justice
Lake Malawi
Living Theater Performances
Mangochi District
Mike Brown
participatory art theory
performance protest methods
Public Art Practices
Red Brigade
Red Rebels
socially engaged art research
Theoretical Genealogy
White Space
World Building Capacity
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032138558
  • Weight: 260g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Dec 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Politics as Public Art presents a keystone collection that pursues new frameworks for a critical understanding of the relationship between public art and protest movements through the utilization of socially engaged and choreopolitical approaches.

This anthology draws from a unique combination of interdisciplinary scholarship and activism where it integrates geographically rich perspectives from political and grassroots community contexts spanning the United States, Europe, Australia, and Southeastern Africa. The volume questions, and reimagines, not only how public art practice can be integral to politics, including forms of surveillance and control of bodily movement. It also probes into how political participation itself can be construed as a form of public artmaking for radical social change and just worlds. This collection advocates for scholar-activist inquiry into how socially engaged public art practices can pave the way for thinking through—and working toward—championing more inclusive futures and, as such, choreographing greater intersectional justice.

This book provides a wide appeal to audiences across humanities and social science scholarship, arts practice, and activism seeking conceptual and empirically informed tools for moving from public art and choreopolitical theory into modes of praxis: critical reflection and action.

Martin Zebracki is Associate Professor of Critical Human Geography, University of Leeds, UK, and has published widely across public art, sexuality, digital culture, and social inclusivity. Zebracki is editor of the Routledge anthologies Public Art Encounters (with Joni M. Palmer; 2017) and The Everyday Practice of Public Art (with Cameron Cartiere; 2016) and editorial board member of Public Art Dialogue.

Z. Zane McNeill is an independent scholar-activist who has written on queer and trans feminisms in contemporary performance, queer of color critique, and quare studies and politichoreography. They are currently an advisory board member for the University Press of Kentucky Book Series Appalachian Futures: Black, Native & Queer Voices.