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    The Revolution Will Be Improvised

    External Review of Whole Manuscript

    The Intimacy of Cultural Activism

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    Author(s)
    Rodriguez Fielder, Elizabeth
    Language
    English
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    Abstract
    The Revolution Will Be Improvised: The Intimacy of Cultural Activism traces intimate encounters between activists and local people of the civil rights movement through an archive of Black and Brown avant-gardism. In the 1960s, Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) activists engaged with people of color working in poor communities to experiment with creative approaches to liberation through theater, media, storytelling, and craft making. With a dearth of resources and an abundance of urgency, SNCC activists improvised new methods of engaging with communities that created possibilities for unexpected encounters through programs such as The Free Southern Theater, El Teatro Campesino, and the Poor People’s Corporation. Reading the output of these programs, Elizabeth Rodriguez Fielder argues that intimacy-making became an extension of participatory democracy. In doing so, Rodriguez Fielder supplants the success-failure binary for understanding social movements, focusing instead on how care work aligns with creative production. The Revolution Will Be Improvised returns to improvisation’s roots in economic and social necessity and locates it as a core tenet of the aesthetics of obligation, where a commitment to others drives the production and result of creative work. Thus, this book puts forward a methodology to explore the improvised, often ephemeral, works of art activism.
    URI
    https://library.oapen.org/handle/20.500.12657/93932
    Keywords
    activism, performance studies, civil rights movement, intimacy, care, social justice, experimental art, creativity, black arts movement, cooperatives, Chicano movement, southern studies, media studies
    DOI
    10.3998/mpub.12849979
    ISBN
    9780472077045, 9780472057047, 9780472904662
    Publisher
    University of Michigan Press
    Publisher website
    https://www.press.umich.edu/
    Publication date and place
    2024
    Classification
    Society and culture: general
    Ethnic studies
    Theatre studies
    Pages
    245
    Rights
    https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
    • Imported or submitted locally

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    License

    • If not noted otherwise all contents are available under Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)

    Credits

    • logo EU
    • This project received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 683680, 810640, 871069 and 964352.

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