Performance Studies: An Introduction explores the wide world of performance--from theatre, dance, and music to ritual, play, political campaigns, social media, and the performances of everyday life. Performance studies also ranges across cultures--Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, the Americas. And it spans historical periods from the art of the paleolithic caves to YouTube and the avantgarde. This course is devised by Richard Schechner, one of the pioneers of performance studies, in dialogue with more than a dozen expert scholars and artists. Performance Studies: An Introduction puts students in dialogue with the most important ideas, approaches, theories, and questions of this dynamic, new academic field.
Learning Objectives
By the end of this course, you should be able to:
Articulate and analyze the major concepts of performance studies
Identify and analyze performances within the “broad spectrum of performance”--from everyday life and social media to performance art and global spectacles such as the Olympics
Comprehend key terms of performance studies, including is/as performance, restored behavior, ritual, play, make-belief/make-believe, performance in everyday life, the performative, and intercultural performance
Produce collaborative work that demonstrates teamwork in applying ideas learned in the course
Compare, analyze, and interpret performances of their own and other cultures
Articulate how the major concepts of the course relate to their own experiences and worldviews
Analyze and criticize in a constructive way the work of classmates
The lessons present Schechner’s concept of performance studies along with online assignments. In the assignments, students apply what they are learning by composing short responses to materials, writing in their NYU Classes Forums, and by reviewing other students’ forum posts each week.
Students choose either to work in groups of 3 to 5 on a term-long project maintaining a project portfolio in NYU Classes or to write a research paper. During the term, each group will lead an in-class 25-minute discussion of their project-in-progress. During the last face-to-face class, each group will present their project.
The weekly content is:
What is Performance?
What is Performance Studies?
Performance Processes
From Not Performing to Performing
Ritual
Play
Performing in the Paleolithic
Ramlila of Ramnagar
The Performing Brain
Performativity
Constructing Social Roles
Social Media
Intercultural, Transcultural, Global
Group Projects & Wrap Up
Course Requirements
Each student is required to complete the week’s online lesson prior to the class session, attend and participate in the class sessions, complete the weekly assignments, participate and present the group project or submit a final paper.
Required Readings
See weekly online lessons.
Required Viewings (Videos)
See weekly online lessons.
Written work
Each student will either participate in a group project or write a research paper due at the end of the term, submitted electronically. Your professor will confer online and/or face-to-face during office hours to help students develop their writing and their projects. If you do a group project your professor may ask you to do some writing in relationship to your project.
Academic Integrity
The policy on plagiarism and academic honesty is posted on Classes. Read this document carefully, and be guided by it.
Copyright
Keep in mind the material you find in the online lessons is subject to copyright. You may not reproduce, reuse, or distribute it without permission outside of your work in this course. For more information on copyright and how it applies to course materials, see the Copyright Basics research guide.
“Performance Studies: An Introduction” explores the wide world of performance--from theatre, dance, and music to ritual, play, political campaigns, social media, and the performances of everyday life. Performance studies also ranges across cultures--Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, Europe, the Americas. And it spans historical periods from the art of the paleolithic caves to YouTube and the avantgarde. This course is devised by Richard Schechner, one of the pioneers of performance studies, in dialogue with more than a dozen expert scholars and artists. “Performance Studies: An Introduction” puts you--students--in dialogue with the most important ideas, approaches, theories, and questions of this dynamic, new academic field.
What's included
1 video1 reading
Show info about module content
1 video•Total 2 minutes
Performance Studies: An Introduction•2 minutes
1 reading•Total 10 minutes
Over All Course Learning Objectives•10 minutes
What Is Performance? What Is Performance Studies?
Module 2•2 hours to complete
Module details
What is performance? What is Performance Studies? Performance is a broad spectrum of actions ranging from play, games, popular entertainments, and rituals to the performing arts, professional roles, political personae, media, and the constructions of race, gender, and identity in everyday life. Performance studies is the academic discipline whose topic is this broad spectrum of actions. To perform is to act in a play, to dance, to make music; to play your life roles as friend, child, parent, student, and so on; to pretend or make believe; to engage in sports and games; to enact sacred and secular rituals; to argue a case in court or present a PowerPoint in class ... and many more activities, too.
Understanding and theorizing the broad spectrum of performance is what performance studies (PS) does. PS is a relatively new academic discipline. The first PS department began at New York University in 1980. The second PS department was started at Northwestern University in 1985. PS expanded rapidly and by now, deep into the second decade of the 21st century, there are PS departments on every continent except Antarctica.Topics we will cover the following topics:What is performance?Kinds of performance Functions of performanceIs/as performanceRestored behaviorMake belief and make believePerformances in/of everyday lifeWhat is performance studies?
What's included
7 videos12 readings3 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 18 minutes
The Fan and the Web•3 minutes
EXCERPT FROM THE WAR ROOM1993, October Films•2 minutes
IS/AS PERFORMANCE•3 minutes
WILLIAM SUN AND FAYE C. FEI: PERFORMANCE STUDIES IN CHINA•4 minutes
RICHARD SHERWIN: SHOULD LAW STUDENTS STUDY PERFORMANCE STUDIES?•4 minutes
FAYE C. FEI AND WILLIAM SUN: IMPROVING SOCIAL PERFORMANCE•2 minutes
ANNE BOGART: HOW HAS PERFORMANCE STUDIES INFLUENCED YOU?•2 minutes
12 readings•Total 120 minutes
Defining Performance•10 minutes
The Nine Kinds of Performance•10 minutes
The Seven Functions of Performance•10 minutes
Is/As Performance•10 minutes
The Basic Parameters of Performance•10 minutes
Restoration of Behavior•10 minutes
Make Believe/Make Belief•10 minutes
What Is Performance Studies?•10 minutes
Performance Studies at NYU and at Northwestern University•10 minutes
Performance Studies in China•10 minutes
A Place for Performance Studies•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
3 assignments
Make Believe/Make Belief•0 minutes
Performance Studies in China•0 minutes
Performance Studies in China•0 minutes
Performance Processes
Module 3•3 hours to complete
Module details
Performances of all kinds are generated, enacted, and evaluated. Exactly how are performances generated? How are they enacted? How are they evaluated? In this lesson, we will concentrate on the processes of making, doing, and evaluating theatre, dance, and music. Why this focus on the "performing arts"? Because the performing arts provide a clear model of performance processes. This model can be applied to the performances of everyday life, rituals, play, and so on. Also I use the performing arts because in their many varieties globally and historically they permeate social, political, intellectual, scientific, and religious life. Shakespeare's adage "all the world's a stage" is demonstrably true (As You Like It II, 2: 138). Throughout this course, we will move back and forth from the aesthetic domain to the other domains of performance
What's included
4 videos9 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
4 videos•Total 48 minutes
RYSZARD CIESLAK TRAINING TWO ACTORS OF THE DANISH ODIN THEATRET From Training in the theatre-laboratory in Wroclaw (1972, Odin Teatret Film)•41 minutes
RICHARD SCHECHNER'S 2009 WORKSHOP AT NYU•5 minutes
Dionysus in 69 virtual environment•0 minutes
MARIANNE WEEMS: THE ROLE OF AUDIENCE•2 minutes
9 readings•Total 90 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence of Performance•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence of Performance: Training•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence Of Performance: Workshop•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence of Performance: Rehearsal•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence of Performance: From Rehearsal to Performance•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence of Performance: Warm-Up, Performance, Cool-Down•10 minutes
The Time-Space Sequence Of Performance: Aftermath•10 minutes
THE PERFORMANCE QUADRILOGUE•10 minutes
Montage, Audience Participation, and Virtual Reality•10 minutes
2 assignments•Total 30 minutes
THE PERFORMANCE QUADRILOGUE•30 minutes
Cooldown•0 minutes
From Not-Performing to Performing
Module 4•2 hours to complete
Module details
Performing is a broad spectrum term, meaning everything from stage acting and ballet dancing to arguing a case in court and displaying different emotions by smiling, frowning, or glaring in anger. In fact, people can't help but perform: displaying and communicating feelings and ideas by means of "codified" behavior, behavior that is shaped in order either to clarify meaning or to be more beautiful – or both. This week we will start in the theatre, move to the courtroom, and end studying the expressive range of the human face.
What's included
4 videos9 readings6 assignments
Show info about module content
4 videos•Total 27 minutes
EXCERPTS FROM THE DICK CAVETT SHOW WITH MARLON BRANDO From The Dick Cavett Show: Hollywood Greats Collection•5 minutes
ANNE BOGART AND MARIANNE WEEMS: KINDS OF ACTING•7 minutes
A STREETCAR NAMED DESIRE•2 minutes
RICHARD SHERWIN: COURTROOM THEATER•13 minutes
9 readings•Total 90 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
Types of Performing•10 minutes
Kinds of Onstage Performing•10 minutes
Realistic Performing•10 minutes
Brechtian Performing•10 minutes
Codified Performing•10 minutes
Courtroom Trials as Performance•10 minutes
Codified Expressions of Emotion in the Human Face•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
6 assignments
TYPES OF PERFORMING•0 minutes
REALISTIC PERFORMING•0 minutes
BRECHTIAN PERFORMING•0 minutes
CODIFIED PERFORMING•0 minutes
COURTROOM TRIALS AS PERFORMANCES•0 minutes
CODIFIED EXPRESSIONS OF EMOTION IN THE HUMAN FACE•0 minutes
Ritual
Module 5•2 hours to complete
Module details
Ritual, like play, underlies all performances and performance-making processes. Ritual has biological roots in non-human animals and manifold cultural manifestations in human societies. Truly, we perform rituals both secular and sacred from before birth to after death.
What's included
12 videos9 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
12 videos•Total 35 minutes
RONALD GRIMES: WHAT IS RITUAL?•3 minutes
PANEL: DEFINING RITUAL•5 minutes
RONALD GRIMES: TURNER'S DEFINITION OF RITUAL•1 minute
RONALD GRIMES: ANIMAL AND HUMAN RITUALS•1 minute
RICHARD SCHECHNER: TURNER AND SOCIAL DRAMA•3 minutes
RICHARD SHERWIN: LAW AS SOCIAL DRAMA•4 minutes
EXCERPT FROM THE WAR ROOM1993, October Films•2 minutes
RONALD GRIMES: ARE RITUALS DRAMATIC?•2 minutes
RICHARD SCHECHNER: LIMINAL AND COMMUNITAS•3 minutes
RONALD GRIMES: A CRITIQUE OF TURNER•3 minutes
PANEL: CAN RITUALS CHANGE?•1 minute
RONALD GRIMES: INVENTING RITUALS•7 minutes
9 readings•Total 90 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
Ritual as Performance•10 minutes
The Evolution of Ritual from Animals to Humans•10 minutes
The Secular and the Sacred•10 minutes
THE RITUAL PROCESS AND COMMUNITAS•10 minutes
Social Drama•10 minutes
Liminal and Liminoid•10 minutes
Changing, Inventing, and Recontextualizing Rituals•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
5 assignments
RITUAL AS PERFORMANCE•0 minutes
The Evolution of Ritual from Animals to Humans•0 minutes
THE SECULAR AND THE SACRED•0 minutes
Social Drama•0 minutes
Liminal and Liminoid•0 minutes
Play
Module 6•3 hours to complete
Module details
People play from birth to death. Play, like ritual, has roots in animal behavior. Cats batting toy mice, dogs fetching balls, chimps wrestling one another, dolphins frolicking in the waves. People-play is very complex, ranging from roughhouse and sports to make believe, pretending, masking, mind-games, and con games (dark play). In this week's lesson, we examine the broad range of play -- make believe, mimicry, carnival, sports, dark play, flow, metacommunication, and more.
What's included
15 videos9 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
15 videos•Total 60 minutes
BRUCE MCCONACHIE: PLAY•4 minutes
GORDON BURGHARDT: WHAT IS PLAY?•1 minute
EXCERPT FROM ANIMALS LIKE US•1 minute
GORDON BURGHARDT: FIVE CRITERIA FOR IDENTIFYING PLAY•11 minutes
BRUCE MCCONACHIE: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN ANIMAL AND HUMAN PLAY•2 minutes
BRUCE MCCONACHIE: KINDS OF PLAY•3 minutes
PANEL: PLAY AND RULES•2 minutes
What is Maya-lia•2 minutes
EXCERPT FROM THE YES MEN FIX THE WORLDFrom The Yes Men•2 minutes
The Yes Men on BBC Bhopal Disaster •6 minutes
The Yes Men on RT Going Underground•11 minutes
EXCERPTS FROM MAS MAN Courtesy of Nalton Narine•5 minutes
Tony Hall & Felix Edinborough: PLAYING MAS•5 minutes
FELIX EDINBOROUGH AS PIERROT GRENADE•1 minute
Gordon Burghardt: THE PRIMEVAL ROOTS OF PLAY•3 minutes
9 readings•Total 90 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
What Is Play? What Is Playing?•10 minutes
Animal and Human Play•10 minutes
Play and Games•10 minutes
Flow and Metacommunication•10 minutes
Maya-Lila•10 minutes
Dark Play•10 minutes
Playing in Public: New York’s Halloween Parade and Trinidad's Carnival•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
5 assignments
WHAT IS PLAY? WHAT IS PLAYING?•0 minutes
Play and Games•0 minutes
Flow and Metacommunication•0 minutes
Maya-Lila•0 minutes
Dark Play•0 minutes
Performing in the Paleolithic
Module 7•2 hours to complete
Module details
In numerous caves around the world, humans many thousands of years ago made "cave art." The earliest art — marks, stencils, images, sculptings — dates to 35-40,000 years BP (before present, with “present” being 2000). Some goes back further, to 70,000 BP and perhaps even earlier.
There is a concentration of this art in southwestern France, northeastern Spain, and southwestern Germany. In 2014, hand stencils and the figure of a pig in the Maros cave in Sulawesi, Indonesia, were dated to 39-40,000 years BP. More recent cave art exists in the Americas, Australia, Africa, and Asia. Doubtlessly, there will be future discoveries in various parts of the world. This week, we will explore how the paleolithic art of Europe was made and what it may have been used for. Could caves be the sites of very ancient human performances?
What's included
3 videos10 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 36 minutes
EXCERPT FROM CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS•12 minutes
EXCERPT FROM CAVE OF FORGOTTEN DREAMS•4 minutes
EXCERPTS FROM HOW ART MADE THE WORLD•20 minutes
10 readings•Total 100 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
What Is the Paleolithic?•10 minutes
Where is the Art and How Old is It?•10 minutes
What Were the Functions of Cave Art?•10 minutes
Vulvas, “Venuses,” Women Artists, Hybrids•10 minutes
Performance as a Key to Understanding the Cave Art•10 minutes
Trance and Hallucination as Ways of Creating Cave Art•10 minutes
Initiation Rites in Paleolithic Caves•10 minutes
Transportation/Transformation•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
2 assignments
Vulvas, “Venuses,” Women Artists, Hybrids•0 minutes
Transportation/Transformation•0 minutes
Ramlila of Ramnagar, India
Module 8•3 hours to complete
Module details
The Ramlila of Ramnagar is a 31-day outdoor performance attended by thousands. The Ramlila tells the story of Rama, the seventh avatar (incarnation) of the Hindu god Vishnu. Ramnagar is a town of 49,000 across the sacred Ganga (Ganges) River from Varanasi, a city of 1.1 million (both numbers from the 2011 census). In this week's lesson, we will apply some concepts from earlier lessons. The Ramlila is an excellent example of ritual and play, make-believe and make-belief, maya-lila, social drama, and communitas. Many Ramlilas are performed in India and in the Indian diaspora. Here, unless I specify otherwise, "Ramlila" refers to the Ramlila of Ramnagar.
Glossary and Pronunciation
Because this week's lesson contains terms, places, and names that may be unfamiliar to you, I have made a glossary. Just click on a word in bold and you will be taken to its definition. Try it with Rama.
In the north Indian dialect of Hindi where Ramlila is performed, the final "a" of many Sanskirt names is not pronounced. The god Rama is "Ram." His brothers Lakshmana, Bharata, and Shatrughna are "Lakshman," "Bharat," and "Shatrughan." The rakshasa (demon) Ravana is "Ravan," and so on.
What's included
7 videos11 readings4 assignments
Show info about module content
7 videos•Total 62 minutes
A DAY AT THE RAMLILA: THE PEOPLE, THE PREPARATION, AND THE DAILY DEPARTURE•9 minutes
RAMAYANIS•1 minute
Make Believe, Make Belief, and Maya-Lila in Ramlila MAKE-BELIEVE AND MAKE-BELIEF IN RAMLILA•1 minute
RAMLILA OF RAMNAGAR: LAKSHMAN CUTS OFF SURPANAKHA'S NOSE AND EARS•2 minutes
BECOMING THE GODS•1 minute
Ramlila as a Social Drama and as a Carnival•3 minutes
THE STORY OF RAMLILA TOLD THROUGH THE EXPERIENCES AND OBSERVATIONS OF RICHARD SCHECHNER•44 minutes
11 readings•Total 110 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
Where is Ramnagar?•10 minutes
What Is the Story?•10 minutes
Kot Vidai: At Ramnagar Ramlila Only•10 minutes
How Ramlila Is Staged: On the Move•10 minutes
The Seven Types of Roles in the Ramlila•10 minutes
Make Believe, Make Belief, and Maya-Lila in Ramlila•10 minutes
Ramlila as a Social Drama and as a Carnival•10 minutes
Ramlila's Spectator Experience as Communitas•10 minutes
Participant Observation•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
4 assignments
WHAT IS THE STORY?•0 minutes
MAKE BELIEVE, MAKE BELIEF, AND MAYA-LILA IN RAMLILA•0 minutes
Ramlila's Spectator Experience as Communitas•0 minutes
Participant Observation•0 minutes
Performativity
Module 9•2 hours to complete
Module details
Performativity is a vast subject stretching from the performances of everyday life to kinds of writing that "does something" such as wills or contracts. Performativity is a way of thinking about human actions in terms of how these actions are staged – sometimes consciously, sometimes unwittingly. A wide range of cultural products from advertising to political speeches, the arts to popular entertainments, newspapers to social media, can be analyzed as "performatives." For the next two lessons, we will explore performativity not only as a theory but as it operates in daily life, the media, and the arts.
What's included
3 videos9 readings5 assignments
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 15 minutes
Panel: Performance, the Performative, and Performativity•6 minutes
CAROL MARTIN: THEATRE OF THE REAL•3 minutes
SPALDING GRAY: EXCERPT FROM SWIMMING TO CAMBODIA•7 minutes
9 readings•Total 90 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
What Is a Performative? What Is Performativity?•10 minutes
Modern, Postmodern, and Poststructural•10 minutes
Speech Acts•10 minutes
The Real and the Imaginary•10 minutes
Simulations•10 minutes
Lifelike Art Versus Artlike Art•10 minutes
Performativity and Performance Art•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
5 assignments
What Is a Performative? What Is Performativity?•0 minutes
Modern, Postmodern, and Poststructural•0 minutes
The Real and the Imaginary•0 minutes
Simulations•0 minutes
Performativity and Performance Art•0 minutes
Constructing Social Roles
Module 10•2 hours to complete
Module details
This week, we will continue to explore performativity – in terms of social roles. What roles do people play in their daily lives? How does being part of a family, a clutch of friends, a class, or any other of the many groups people belong to change who a person “really is”? Does each individual have a core self or do people change in response to circumstances? How does the process of growth, development, and decline affect who a person is? The complex relationships between society and biology, the individual and the group, are always in flux. Maintaining any particular place within a social group takes “emotional labor” – also called "immaterial labor" – a kind of “deep acting.” People are not pretending or being insincere as they move through various social roles. Performance studies offers ways to question, examine, and understand these roles.
What's included
3 videos7 readings6 assignments
Show info about module content
3 videos•Total 15 minutes
Guillermo Gómez-Peña Speaks about Multiple Identities•2 minutes
EXCERPTS FROM PARIS IS BURNING•8 minutes
EXCERPT FROM FIRES IN THE MIRROR•5 minutes
7 readings•Total 70 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
What Are Social Roles?•10 minutes
Playing Social Roles•10 minutes
Emotional Labor•10 minutes
Constructions of Gender•10 minutes
Constructions of Race•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
6 assignments•Total 30 minutes
Constructions of Gender•30 minutes
What Are Social Roles?•0 minutes
Playing Social Roles•0 minutes
Agree or Disagree •0 minutes
Constructions of Race•0 minutes
Summary•0 minutes
Social Media
Module 11•3 hours to complete
Module details
How important is social media? Donald Trump, who Tweets incessantly, credits his election and the success (if you call it that) of his agenda to social media. Social media is the public face of digitization. Digitization is the ability to quantify data, turn data into information, manipulate the information, derive knowledges from it, and disseminate those knowledges. Digitization is a two-way street. Data becomes knowledge and knowledge becomes data. This process is revolutionizing human societies. The internet is an example of digitization – and social media is part of the internet. In fact, social media is exactly what the phrase indicates: the means (media) for people to "socialize," – to be in touch with each other on various scales ranging from one-to-one, one-to-few, few-to-few, one-to-many, and many-to-many. Theoretically a single person can communicate with the whole world.
The flexibility of social media means that it can be used not only for personal contact but to convene a public in the digital commons. This new democracy, if one can use that word in this instance, is not the agora of ancient Athens where all the adult men met to decide matters of common interest. But it is not not the agora. It is a version of this ancient idea. By means of YouTube, Twitter, Facebook, email, and such, people interact as individuals and small groups; and as large associations and even "all" of humankind, at least in theory.
On social media, a person is always performing, constructing an online "persona" – the ancient Greek and Latin word for a theatrical mask/character. Etymologically, a "person" is a mask, a performance. If a person's daily behavior is a performance – and in this course you have explored how this is so – then a person's online persona is doubly performative. Online performances are not inauthentic. But on social media they can be constructed and managed carefully and consciously. In last week's lesson we learned that gender and race are constructed. Similarly, people construct versions of themselves on and for social media. In the final section of this week's lesson, "Media's Influence on the Arts," I go beyond social media and the performing arts. I consider media in the larger sense, including both digital and nondigital media, in relation to all the arts. My principal example comes from theatre, but I want you to extrapolate from this example and apply what you learn to all the arts.
What's included
12 videos12 readings9 assignments
Show info about module content
12 videos•Total 55 minutes
PANEL: THE PERFORMER-AUDIENCE ROLE•1 minute
DANAH BOYD: GOFFMAN'S DEFINITION OF PERFORMANCE•3 minutes
CLAY SHIRKY: THE ARGUMENT AGAINST DIGITAL DUALISM•8 minutes
DANAH BOYD: THE ONLINE VERSUS THE OFFLINE SELF•2 minutes
DANAH BOYD: ONLINE BEHAVIOR AND IDENTITY•7 minutes
danah boyd: Demographics and Online Identity•4 minutes
danah boyd: Public and Private Audiences •5 minutes
Clay Shirky/danah boyd: Social Media, Social Equality, and Social Change•3 minutes
Clay Shirky: Social Media and Political Action •8 minutes
Clay Shirky: Can Online Protests Replace Physical Protests•5 minutes
12 readings•Total 120 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
Changing the Ways People Communicate•10 minutes
Performing Yourself Using Social Media•10 minutes
Online and Offline Performances•10 minutes
History and Theory of Social Media/Social Networks•10 minutes
Constructions of Identities on Social Media•10 minutes
The Importance of Interests•10 minutes
Ways of Performing Online•10 minutes
Truth and Lies in Social Media•10 minutes
Social Media, Equality, and Change•10 minutes
Media's Influence on the Arts•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
9 assignments
Changing the Ways People Communicate•0 minutes
PERFORMING YOURSELF ON SOCIAL MEDIA•0 minutes
Online and Offline Performances•0 minutes
Constructions of Identities on Social Media•0 minutes
The Importance of Interests•0 minutes
Ways of Performing Online•0 minutes
Truth and Lies in Social Media•0 minutes
Social Media, Equality, and Change•0 minutes
Media's Influence on the Arts•0 minutes
Intercultural, Transcultural, Global
Module 12•2 hours to complete
Module details
The world is always getting smaller. It's been that way for millennia. Each time a new means of communication is invented, the world shrinks. The world with spoken language is smaller than the world without it; the world with written language is smaller than the world without it. And on through printing, telecommunications, digitization, the WWW, the internet .... Doubtlessly, in the future the world will get even smaller. More crowded not only with people but with ideas, ideologies, arts, and technologies. Therefore, in one sense, globalization is nothing new. It is the continuation – and acceleration – by new means of the long-operating process of linking humans to each other across time and space. Sometimes these links result in increased cooperation and understanding. Sometimes these links result in conflicts, displacements, wars, and genocides. In other words, there is nothing inherently good or bad about the process of world-shrinking aka globalization.
Of course, there is also the possibility also that at some point globalization will result in smoothing out cultural differences as information technology and the increasing mobility of people – sometimes voluntarily, sometimes under pressure – accelerates the emergence of a global uniculture. Already such a uniculture exists as both an umbrella and a base, systems that overarch individual cultures and underlie them at the same time. While "purity" used to be a prime value, today hybridity holds sway. At the same time, there is plenty of evidence showing the continuing vibrancy of distinct cultures and belief systems; globalization has not eliminated differences in religion, languages, ideologies, and cultural practices. These differences, and other factors including the inequities fostered by globalization, create a backlash against globalization -- the rise of Donald Trump in the USA, the increasing strength of Marine Le Pen in France, the Brexit vote taking the UK out of the European Union, and nationalist/xenophobic movements elsewhere. Terrorism can be read as anti-globalization. Today's world is both global and local: glocal. Many of the myriad interactions of the glocal are performative.
What's included
5 videos8 readings2 assignments
Show info about module content
5 videos•Total 22 minutes
RICHARD SCHECHNER: TRANSCULTURAL PERFORMANCES•2 minutes
COCO FUSCO AND PAULA HEREDIA, THE COUPLE IN THE CAGE: A GUATINAUI ODYSSEY•2 minutes
WILLIAM SUN AND FAYE C. FEI: INTERCULTURAL PERFORMANCES•6 minutes
PANEL: TRANSCULTURATION•3 minutes
GUILLERMO GÓMEZ-PEÑA INTERVIEW•9 minutes
8 readings•Total 80 minutes
Introduction•10 minutes
WHAT IS GLOBALIZATION?•10 minutes
Intercultural, Multicultural, and Transcultural Performances?•10 minutes
Intercultural Performances•10 minutes
Transcultural Performances•10 minutes
Terrorism as Performance•10 minutes
The Olympics as Global Performance•10 minutes
Summary•10 minutes
2 assignments
What Is Globalization?•0 minutes
Transcultural Performances•0 minutes
Looking Back, Looking Forward
Module 13•3 minutes to complete
Module details
Looking Back, Looking Forward:
We are nearing the end of our journey exploring the broad spectrum of performance studies. Performance studies is a discipline and a methodology. We have worked with both the theories and practices of many scholars and artists, from a variety of disciplines and genres, considering these in relation to a variety of secular and sacred performances across cultures, styles, epochs, and genres. You are learning performance studies by practicing it.
Performance studies is always going somewhere, but never arriving at a stop-point. Or, to put it differently: performance studies is embodied and archival research moving into new places with new ideas creating as well as finding its topics and objects of study. Performance studies is imagined at the intersection of cultures, academic disciplines, artistic practices, and social media. Performance studies will keep growing and changing as more programs and departments are created and more scholars and artists use performance studies as a method of inquiry and creativity.
In this course, you've worked both with me online and with a teacher in class. The in-class teacher and I have been in contact about the work you've been doing. We recognize that this course, both online and in class, is a living organism. We've tried to make the relationship between learning and teaching organic and performative. Explaining, defining, probing, exploring, researching, writing, and critically examining the topics of this multi-layered course are integral to the teaching-learning process. In a phrase, you are teaching us just as we are teaching you.
During the past weeks, you have practiced the process of performance studies. This week you will show and share some of the results of that practice. You will present your final projects or your final papers. Shortly after, you will turn in your final papers on [date]. I hope that your presentations and papers won't be the end of the matter. I hope that what you've accomplished during this course will inform the way you live the rest of your lives.
What's included
1 video
Show info about module content
1 video•Total 3 minutes
COURSE SUMMARY BY RICHARD SCHECHNER•3 minutes
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"When I need courses on topics that my university doesn't offer, Coursera is one of the best places to go."
Chaitanya A.
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Learner reviews
4.8
83 reviews
5 stars
85.54%
4 stars
9.63%
3 stars
3.61%
2 stars
0%
1 star
1.20%
Showing 3 of 83
L
LA
4·
Reviewed on Sep 12, 2022
It is good, maybe it can use modern methods so will not be monotonous.
R
RI
4·
Reviewed on Jul 30, 2025
It is a good introduction, but the content needs to be updated and also there are some modules where the instructor need to recognize its bias.
D
DM
5·
Reviewed on Nov 29, 2020
Excellent introduction to Performance Studies from the expert who wrote the definitive text on the subject.
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Is financial aid available?
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