CONTEXTUALIZING LIVENESS: THE EVOLVING STATUS OF LIVE PERFORMANCE IN EUROPE

Date: 

Wednesday, March 20, 2024, 2:00pm

Location: 

Online

chekhovOS /an experimental game/. Five people, dressed in black, stand scattered through a blank white space, with black lines crisscrossing around.TRANSMEDIA ARTS

SPEAKER: Katie Hawthorne, Theater Dortmund's Academy for Theatre and Digitality, Germany

What makes a performance live, and how is liveness changing? After the COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a wave of digital theatre, the liveness of live performance has never been more contested. This lecture draws on Hawthorne's doctoral thesis 'Contextualising Liveness: Digitally Distributed, Digitally Mediated and Digitally Located Theatre in Edinburgh and Berlin, 2017-19' to discuss the historical role of liveness within theatre and performance studies and in the broader context of evolving digital media. It proposes a comparative, material approach to the analysis of liveness, and presents a series of case studies from across Europe (following Hawthorne's 2023 European Theatre Convention study on digital theatre) to reveal how liveness can be shaped by both artistic and extra-theatrical factors, including funding landscapes and hierarchies of cultural value. Ultimately, this lecture argues that as new communication technologies continue to be created, modes of liveness in the theatre will continue to evolve.

About the Speaker

Katie Hawthorne is a researcher and writer based in Scotland. Katie completed her Ph.D at the University of Edinburgh in 2022, with a thesis which explored how 'liveness' in theatre and performance is evolving through the use of digital tools and technologies. She is an alumna of Theater Dortmund's Academy for Theatre and Digitality's fellowship programme. During her residency, she developed an installation project titled Automating the Audience. Since 2022 she has worked for the Academy on the creation of a new online research archive, due to be launched in Autumn 2023. Katie is the author of the first cross-European study Digital Theatre: Digital Strategies and Business Models in European Theatre (2023), commissioned by the European Theatre Convention and the Academy for Theatre and Digitality. She presented this research at the European Theatre Forum in Opole. Katie has also given papers at a host of international conferences and institutions, including the IFTR in Shanghai and TaPRA in Exeter, and authored a chapter on the Berliner Theatertreffen in the Edinburgh German Yearbook in 2021. Outside of academia, Katie is an accomplished freelance journalist and regularly contributes to publications including The Guardian and The Scotsman.

How To Join

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If you have any questions, please contact Magda Romanska at magda[at]metalab.harvard.edu

This event is co-sponsored with metaLAB (at) Harvard.