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Virtual embodiment as/and the threshold of love

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:53 authored by Daniel HarrisDaniel Harris
This essay draws upon the author's performance script Fall and Walter Benjamin's The Arcades Project as a provocation for considering the ways performance texts provide a threshold for somatic inquiry, and for recognizing the limits of scholarly analysis that does not take up performance-as-inquiry. Set at the Empire State Building, this essay embodies the connections and missed possibilities between strangers and intimates in the context of urban modern life. Fall's protagonist is positioned within a landscape of capitalist exchange, but defies this matrix to offer instead a gift at the threshold of life/death, virtual/real, and love/loss. Through somatic inquiry and witnessing as threshold experiences, the protagonist (as Benjamin's flaneur) moves through urban space and time, proving that both scholarship and performance remain irrevocably embodied, and as such invariably tethered to the visceral, the stranger, risk, and death.

History

Journal

Departures in Critical Qualitative Research

Volume

3

Issue

2

Start page

97

End page

109

Total pages

13

Publisher

University of California Press

Place published

United States

Language

English

Copyright

© 2014 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved.

Former Identifier

2006072780

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-12-04

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