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Disability Culture Methods: Process/Score-Work in the University Dance Classroom
May 10, 2023
Reminder: Times are all EDT/EST
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ASL/Closed Captioning Available
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In this webinar, we will look at various ways that disability culture methods can enhance, supplement and disrupt dance classrooms in productive and enjoyable ways. How can we use score-work and media engagement to re-do notions of presence, in particular when so many students cannot be present all the time in person, have to be online, cannot commit to harsh time regimes, or deal with injury and rest periods? How can we use disability artistry and lineage work to understand how else dance can find its way into the (university and public) world?
Agenda
Speakers
| Name | Organization | Speaking At |
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| Elisabeth Motley | Marymount Manhattan College |
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Petra Kuppers
<p>Petra Kuppers (she/her) is a community performance artist, a disability culture activist, and a wheelchair dancer. She uses social somatics, performance, and speculative writing to engage audiences toward more socially just and enjoyable futures. She has been engaged in community dance and disability culture production since the late 80s and continues to lead workshops internationally. Currently, she runs weekly online disability culture movement classes, Starship Somatics, through Movement Research.</p>
<p>When her chronic pain does not allow outer movement, Kuppers writes. Her third performance poetry collection, <em>Gut Botany </em>(Wayne State University Press, 2020), was named one of the top ten US poetry books of 2020 by the New York Public Library and won the 2022 Creative Book Award by the Association for the Study of Literature and the Environment. Kuppers also writes speculative fiction and academic books (latest, <em>Eco Soma: Joy and Pain in Speculative Performance Encounters</em> (University of Minnesota Press, 2022, open access).</p>
<p>Kuppers was a 2021 Dance Research Fellow at the New York Public Library's dance division, where she created the ongoing Crip/Mad Archive Dances, and she is a 2022 Dance/USA Fellow. She is Artistic Director of The Olimpias, an international disability culture collective, and co-creates Turtle Disco, a somatic writing studio, with her wife, poet and dancer Stephanie Heit, from their home on Three Fires Confederacy Territory, colonially known as Ypsilanti, Michigan.</p>
<p>Kuppers is the Anita Gonzalez Collegiate Professor of Performance Studies and Disability Culture at the University of Michigan, and an adviser on the MFA in Interdisciplinary Arts at Goddard College.</p>
<p>www.petrakuppers.com</p>
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University of Michigan |
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