Precarious Forms: Performing Utopia in the Neoliberal Americas

Author:   Candice Amich
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
ISBN:  

9780810141834


Pages:   207
Publication Date:   30 May 2020
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Precarious Forms: Performing Utopia in the Neoliberal Americas


Overview

Precarious Forms: Performing Utopia in the Neoliberal Americas explores how performance art and poetry convey utopian desires even in the bleakest of times. Candice Amich argues that utopian longing in the neoliberal Americas paradoxically arises from the material conditions of socioeconomic crisis. Working across national, linguistic, and generic boundaries, Amich identifies new political and affective modes of reception in her examination of resistant art forms. She locates texts in the activist struggles of the Global South, where neoliberal extraction and exploitation most palpably reanimate the colonial and imperial legacies of earlier stages of capitalism. The poets and artists surveyed in Precarious Forms enact gestures of solidarity and mutual care at sites of neoliberal dispossession. In her analysis of poems, body art, and multimedia installations that illuminate the persistence of a radical utopian imaginary in the Americas, Amich engages critical debates in performance studies, Latin American cultural studies, literature, and art history.

Full Product Details

Author:   Candice Amich
Publisher:   Northwestern University Press
Imprint:   Northwestern University Press
Weight:   0.475kg
ISBN:  

9780810141834


ISBN 10:   0810141833
Pages:   207
Publication Date:   30 May 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Reviews

With extraordinary insight and with exhaustive research, Candice Amich offers an original study of how various Latin American performance artists, poets, and activists, from the 1960s to today, rewrite, re-embody, and reposition themselves against neoliberal doctrine. This book invites the reader to consider the effects of the Washington Consensus through the exploration of precarious forms of conviviality. The author cleverly questions the utopia in performances while proposing possible answers in the creation and manifestation of communities through artistic practice. --Paola Hernandez, co-editor of Imagining Human Rights in Twenty-First-Century Theatre: Global Perspectives. Precarious Forms is an arresting study of how performance and poetry have pierced the 'neoliberal sensorium' of U.S. hegemony in the Americas, from the 1973 imposition of neoliberal order in Chile, through the Central American wars and NAFTA, to the present. Through an immersive reading of critically important works, Amich powerfully weaves together two central strands of contemporary aesthetic and social thought: precarity as an embodied structure of feeling foundational to neoliberalism, and utopia, understood in its performative, political dimensions. --Jill Lane, author of Blackface Cuba, 1840-1895 Neoliberalism has nowadays become a widespread term amongst political theorists for describing the model dominating global politics over the past four decades. Yet within the field of cultural studies, work remains to be done on both how neoliberalism has shaped our feelings and bodies and how art can intervene in the neoliberal distribution of the sensible. Precarious Forms is an important read for anyone interested in understanding our present time and challenging the neoliberal assumption that even though the system is not always just, given that alternatives have failed, this is all that is left. --Alexandra Perisic, ALH Online Review


Neoliberalism has nowadays become a widespread term amongst political theorists for describing the model dominating global politics over the past four decades. Yet within the field of cultural studies, work remains to be done on both how neoliberalism has shaped our feelings and bodies and how art can intervene in the neoliberal distribution of the sensible. Precarious Forms is an important read for anyone interested in understanding our present time and challenging the neoliberal assumption that even though the system is not always just, given that alternatives have failed, this is all that is left. --Alexandra Perisic, ALH Online Review With this book, Amich has created a fruitful space for dialogue among practices from different artists during different periods of the neoliberal historical sequence. The book will appeal to those interested in performance art and poetry and in the relation between artistic practices and pressing issues such as migration, exile, precarious forms of labor, and post-revolutionary and post-dictatorship struggles for justice and visibilization. Her close readings are illuminating and some of them offer novel ways of entering or re-entering classic works . . . a novel contribution to a corpus of critical works that center utopia in the struggle against neoliberalism. --Cesar Barros A., Latin American Theatre Review Precarious Forms is an arresting study of how performance and poetry have pierced the 'neoliberal sensorium' of U.S. hegemony in the Americas, from the 1973 imposition of neoliberal order in Chile, through the Central American wars and NAFTA, to the present. Through an immersive reading of critically important works, Amich powerfully weaves together two central strands of contemporary aesthetic and social thought: precarity as an embodied structure of feeling foundational to neoliberalism, and utopia, understood in its performative, political dimensions. --Jill Lane, author of Blackface Cuba, 1840-1895 With extraordinary insight and with exhaustive research, Candice Amich offers an original study of how various Latin American performance artists, poets, and activists, from the 1960s to today, rewrite, re-embody, and reposition themselves against neoliberal doctrine. This book invites the reader to consider the effects of the Washington Consensus through the exploration of precarious forms of conviviality. The author cleverly questions the utopia in performances while proposing possible answers in the creation and manifestation of communities through artistic practice. --Paola Hernandez, co-editor of Imagining Human Rights in Twenty-First-Century Theatre: Global Perspectives.


Author Information

Candice Amich is an assistant professor of English at Vanderbilt University.

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