Performing Global NetworksKaren Fricker, Ronit Lenṭin Networks are everywhere: from migrant organisations to information technology, from business to social movements, from international governance to global non-governmental organisations, from theatrical collectives to fan clubs, from memory sites to narrative circles. The portmanteau terms networks, and more specifically, global networks, seem to have become the mots du jour in contemporary cultural and social studies. But what cultural, social and political work do global networks accomplish: what is the work of these networks? This path-breaking collection follows Graeme Thompsonâ (TM)s rallying cry for a clearer analytical approach to the ways in which networks are â ~enacted, assembled, conducted, and performed.â (TM) In its thirteen chapters, scholars from a variety of fields â " sociology, theatre and performance studies, peace studies, history, and musicology â " as well as social and cultural activists, explore the multiple meanings of global networks and performance. |
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Page 122
... colonies such fears led to the increased grounding of imperial and colonial authority in bodily differences between rulers and ruled and to bringing the bodily practices of the British into closer alignment with their counterparts in ...
... colonies such fears led to the increased grounding of imperial and colonial authority in bodily differences between rulers and ruled and to bringing the bodily practices of the British into closer alignment with their counterparts in ...
Page 127
... colonies but between colonies . While the British government was aware of the existence of trading networks linking metropole and colonies prior to the First World War , it was not until after the War , when it began compiling reports ...
... colonies but between colonies . While the British government was aware of the existence of trading networks linking metropole and colonies prior to the First World War , it was not until after the War , when it began compiling reports ...
Page 132
... colonies . Britain sought to maintain this imperial anti - obscenity cordon sanitaire through informing colonial and dominion governments as to what publications they should refuse entry to , notifying them of discoveries made through ...
... colonies . Britain sought to maintain this imperial anti - obscenity cordon sanitaire through informing colonial and dominion governments as to what publications they should refuse entry to , notifying them of discoveries made through ...
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Abbey Theatre actors African AkiDwA analysis Anglo-Irish Agreement anti-trafficking Arambe argues artistic asylum seekers audience Bat Shalom become Britain British Cambridge campaign Centre chapter colonies concept conflict contemporary Contest cosmopolitan Culture Ireland debate diasporic economic emergence emphasis empire ethnic Europe event example fan network feminist Fuchs Garret FitzGerald gender global networks globalisation Holton human rights identity immigrant individual intercultural interview Irish culture Irish fan Irish theatre Israel Israeli issue Italian Lentin and McVeigh live London Machsom Watch memory microhistory migrant women migration movement Nakba narrative national theatre networking activities Northern Ireland obscenity OGAE organisations Oxford Pappe participate performance play Plough political Priestman-Bright circle production prostitution racism regulation relation role Routledge social networks society songs stage Studies theory trafficking transnational transnationalism Trinity College Dublin University Press women migrants women's networks women's rights world music Zochrot