Lushetich, Natasha (University of Exeter, UK)

Performative Disciplinarity in Alternate Reality From Foucault to McKenzie and Beyond

For Foucault, discipline was a subtle form of power that coerced the body in order to control its movements, attitudes and moods. A disciplined body was thus a body trained for the production of specific corporeal operations; it was docile because its life energies had been channeled in such ways as to increase economic utility and decrease non-regulated assignments of energy, political disobedience included. For Jon McKenzie, it is performance that takes the place of disciplinarity in the 21st century. Seen as an ‘onto-historical formation of power’, performance refers not only to techno-organisational efficiency but to excessive performance, too. Unlike the disciplinary regime, which prompts compliant displays of normative behaviour, performance adopts the norm by means of transgression and produces playful, hyperactive subject-actors in the process.

By focusing on AR games – games that transcend the ‘magic circle’ and ‘leak into’ reality – this paper asks the following question: can the existential amplification found in play be seen as the next echelon in the performance-indexed formation of power? The framework for examining this possibility is based on the interpenetration of positive and negative freedom found in AR games, which, although pervasively present in all areas of life due to the ubiquity of mobile computing, conform to Huizinga’s definition of play as an activity that proceeds according to the rules freely accepted and outside the sphere of necessity. Since positive freedom is freedom accept the necessary obligations, while negative freedom, which is the cornerstone of neoliberalism, is freedom from all restraints, AR games can be seen as stand-ins for positive freedom. In examining the relationship between chief AR components: extreme engagement, tight feedback loops and striated goals, this paper seeks to reflect on the possibility of a disciplinarity derived from ‘freedom’ and excess, rather than from restrictive channeling and constraint.

 

Natasha Lushetich is an artist and performance scholar. Having received her PhD in 2011, she is currently Lecturer in Performance and Visual Cultures at the University of Exeter, UK. Natasha’s research focuses on intermedial practices from the 1960s onwards, art in social context, cultural performance and questions of identity and ideology. She is a regular speaker at international conferences and has published with Performance Research, TDR, Text and Performance Quarterly, Babilonia, Theatre Journal and The Total Art Journal; her work has also appeared in a number of edited collections. Natasha is currently working on two monographs, Fluxus the Practice of Non-Duality (Rodopi) and Interdisciplinary Performance Practice (Palgrave).

Ce contenu a été publié dans Abstracts, et marqué avec par Flore Garcin-Marrou.

Pour citer cet article : Flore Garcin-Marrou, "Lushetich, Natasha (University of Exeter, UK)", Labo LAPS 2014. URL : https://tpp2014.com/lushetich-natasha-university-of-exeter-uk/

A propos de l'auteur : Flore Garcin-Marrou

Flore Garcin-Marrou est docteur en littérature française (Université Paris 4 – Sorbonne). Elle a enseigné les Études théâtrales à la Faculté libre des Sciences humaines de Lille et à l’Université Toulouse Le Mirail. Sa thèse s’intitule "Gilles Deleuze, Félix Guattari : entre théâtre et philosophie". Elle est l’auteur d’articles sur le théâtre au carrefour des sciences humaines. Elle est également metteur en scène de sa compagnie "La Spirale ascensionnelle" et poursuit un travail d’expérimentation théâtrale au sein du Laboratoire des Arts et Philosophies de la Scène (LAPS).