Exercises in intra-acting: A zone of potential

And an exercise about not dropping out. ‘Tape yourself to a green chair.’

Authors

  • Kristina Junttila UoT – The Arctic University of Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7577/information.4083

Abstract

This article is about the participatory performance event Speak for yourself (Snakk for deg sjøl) performed mainly for teenagers at schools through the Norwegian Cultural Schoolbag program (Den kulturelle skolesekken), but also for an open audience at Hålogaland Theatre and the Arctic Arts Festival. The center of the discussion concerns what has agency to initiate various ways of participation and produce a zone of potential in this performance event. The author is one of the artists of the performance and thus the diffractive analysis is informed by her role as artist-researcher. The study’s theoretical framework is inspired by the theory of agential realism from physician and feminist theorist Karen Barad.

The analysis suggests that the initiation of participation is a complex process influenced by both human and non-human performative agents in intra-action with each other. This study will especially focus on the formulation of exercises, performance objects, social media, multiplicity and affect t as performative agents in this performance event. The study indicates that being attentive to the performative agents at play and the kind of participation they produce can potentially create a space where there is room for inclusion, diversity, and unpredictability. This kind of zone of potential also has value for other participatory projects in the intersection between pedagogy and art.

Author Biography

Kristina Junttila, UoT – The Arctic University of Norway

Kristina Junttila is associate professor at The Academy of Music, The Arctic University of Norway.

A yellow chair with Graffiti written on it.

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Published

2020-12-15

How to Cite

Junttila, K. (2020). Exercises in intra-acting: A zone of potential: And an exercise about not dropping out. ‘Tape yourself to a green chair.’. Nordic Journal of Art & Research, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.7577/information.4083

Issue

Section

Articles