Full-text resources of CEJSH and other databases are now available in the new Library of Science.
Visit https://bibliotekanauki.pl

Results found: 2

first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last

Search results

Search:
in the keywords:  James Clifford
help Sort By:

help Limit search:
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
EN
The aim of the article is to examine possibilities of using the experience of the qualitative social research in developing more complex interpretation methods of participatory projects in theatre and performance art. Departing from the classical essay On Ethnographic Authority by James Clifford which traces different strategies that researchers use to represent the field reality in their writing, the author introduces the qualitative research trend and its reflexion. The author refers to different ways of how qualitative researchers argue with the traditional hegemony of the scientific text, its isolation from the field and from the community being researched, and the way it creates the hierarchy between them and the researcher. Such strategies from qualitative methodologies, such as grounded theory, triangulation of methods and points of views, attempts to share control on the research process with the local participants and to include polyphony in the texts are presented as inspiring for the analysis of participatory practices. The author compares the lesson learnt from qualitative research with the theses of Claire Bishop in her well-known book Artificial Hells: Participatory Art and the Politics of Spectatorship. According to the author, the perspective of qualitative research can be interpreted as a new attempt at thinking about social and artistic, ethic and aesthetic dimensions of the participatory projects, which is a crucial issue for Bishop.
PL
Wychodząc od stwierdzenia Jamesa Clifforda, że etnografia jest wytworem doświadczenia podróżniczego oraz odwołując się do koncepcji Michaela Taussiga, który w swoich badaniach plemion Ameryki Południowej uwzględnił dzieje podboju kolonialnego, wpływ działalności misjonarzy oraz rolę zapożyczeń kulturowych, Loska proponuje analizę kolumbijskiego filmu W objęciach węża (El abrazo de la serpiente, 2015, reż. Ciro Guerra) w perspektywie postkolonialnej. Film ten odczytuje jako próbę krytycznego spojrzenia na mit Amazonii, czyli europejską fantazję stworzoną przez odkrywców i podróżników poszukujących Raju Utraconego, ale również jako opowieść o wydziedziczeniu z tradycji, utracie pamięci przez ludność rdzenną, refleksję nad skutkami przemocy kolonialnej oraz hybrydyzacji (rozumianej jako przestrzeń ścierania się wpływów i mieszania się języków).
EN
Starting from James Clifford's statement that ethnography is a product of travel experience and referring to the concept of Michael Taussig, who in his studies of South American tribes took into account the history of colonial conquest, the impact of missionary activities and the role of cultural borrowings, Loska proposes an analysis of the Colombian film Snake's Grasp (El abrazo de la serpiente, 2015, directed by Ciro Guerra) in a post-colonial perspective. The author interprets this film as an attempt to critically consider the Amazon myth, that is the European fantasy created by explorers and travellers seeking Paradise Lost, but also as a story of disinheritance from tradition, loss of memory by indigenous people, reflection on the effects of colonial violence and hybridization (understood as a space where influences clash and languages mix).
first rewind previous Page / 1 next fast forward last
JavaScript is turned off in your web browser. Turn it on to take full advantage of this site, then refresh the page.