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A new performativity: wearables and body-devices

conference contribution
posted on 2024-10-31, 17:41 authored by Danielle Wilde
In their relatively short history, wearables and body-devices have evolved from cyborg-like extensions and utilitarian solutions aimed at enhancing efficiency, to poetic representations and experiences that give form to the imagination through indirect and abstract transformations. These new body-artefacts, in particular those that directly consider the body's capacity for movement, afford a new kind of performativity that is as much experiential as it is representational. By engaging in an embodied, pre-verbal discourse such works encourage observer empathy in a way that shifts from traditional performance forms such as dance and theatre. Observer can be interactor and roles of performer and audience are blurred or no longer apply. This article examines the emergence of this new performativity. The works cited are examined in relation to Heideggerian notions of poeisis and exstasis, poeticisation and enchantment. An analysis of the evolution of wearables and body-devices in relation to their inherent performativity has been lacking. This article addresses this gap.

History

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  1. 1.
    ISBN - Is published in 9780980718638 (urn:isbn:9780980718638)
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Start page

184

End page

190

Total pages

7

Outlet

Proceedings of the Re:live Media Art Histories Conference 2009

Editors

S. Cubitt and P. Thomas

Name of conference

Re:Live Media Art Histories Conference 2009

Publisher

University of Melbourne

Place published

Melbourne, Australia

Start date

2009-11-26

End date

2009-11-29

Language

English

Copyright

© University of Melbourne

Former Identifier

2006047099

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-01-15

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