States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism

The review article comments on major themes and ideas analysed by S.E. Wilmer’s Performing Statelessness in Europe (Palgrave 2018). Wilmer’s analysis offers an overview of most recent as well as historical approaches to the concept of citizenship and the state which have been developed by avant-gard...

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Main Author: Lachman Michal
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-01-01
Series:Open Cultural Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0046
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spelling doaj-0ddd005e04bd469abd4fad25f78748142021-09-06T19:19:47ZengDe GruyterOpen Cultural Studies2451-34742019-01-013153153810.1515/culture-2019-0046culture-2019-0046States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadismLachman Michal0University of Lodz, Lodz, PolandThe review article comments on major themes and ideas analysed by S.E. Wilmer’s Performing Statelessness in Europe (Palgrave 2018). Wilmer’s analysis offers an overview of most recent as well as historical approaches to the concept of citizenship and the state which have been developed by avant-garde artists and theatre makers. The overall aim of Wilmer’s survey of political art is to “assess strategies by creative artists to address matters relating to social justice”. He also gives a significant amount of attention to various projects carried by German theatres which attempt to integrate resident immigrants into German society. The central thrust of his argument falls on a variety of contemporary theatrical initiatives directly concerned with the life of refugees and asylum seekers. The review highlights those aspects of Wilmer’s argument which directly concern the concept of modern society, nation state and identity. Wilmer shows precisely these aspects of modern state as most destructive. The review questions that assumption, arguing that the criticism of modern society should be more subtle and nuanced and that the potential failure of responding properly to the crisis does not necessarily lie entirely on the side of the statehttps://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0046refugees crisiseuropean theatrenation statesocial justice
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lachman Michal
spellingShingle Lachman Michal
States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
Open Cultural Studies
refugees crisis
european theatre
nation state
social justice
author_facet Lachman Michal
author_sort Lachman Michal
title States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
title_short States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
title_full States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
title_fullStr States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
title_full_unstemmed States of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
title_sort states of mind – political theatre at the age of nomadism
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Cultural Studies
issn 2451-3474
publishDate 2019-01-01
description The review article comments on major themes and ideas analysed by S.E. Wilmer’s Performing Statelessness in Europe (Palgrave 2018). Wilmer’s analysis offers an overview of most recent as well as historical approaches to the concept of citizenship and the state which have been developed by avant-garde artists and theatre makers. The overall aim of Wilmer’s survey of political art is to “assess strategies by creative artists to address matters relating to social justice”. He also gives a significant amount of attention to various projects carried by German theatres which attempt to integrate resident immigrants into German society. The central thrust of his argument falls on a variety of contemporary theatrical initiatives directly concerned with the life of refugees and asylum seekers. The review highlights those aspects of Wilmer’s argument which directly concern the concept of modern society, nation state and identity. Wilmer shows precisely these aspects of modern state as most destructive. The review questions that assumption, arguing that the criticism of modern society should be more subtle and nuanced and that the potential failure of responding properly to the crisis does not necessarily lie entirely on the side of the state
topic refugees crisis
european theatre
nation state
social justice
url https://doi.org/10.1515/culture-2019-0046
work_keys_str_mv AT lachmanmichal statesofmindpoliticaltheatreattheageofnomadism
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