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Internet culture
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Journal Article
Theater (2018) 48 (1): 55–67.
Published: 01 February 2018
... Theatre 2018 Immanuel Kant The Great Outdoors We’re Watching surveillance big data Internet culture the sublime stuplimity Sianne Ngai Longinus Romanticism digital art Kenneth Goldsmith Norbert Wiener entropy cybernetics informatics Annie Dorsen
The Sublime...
Journal Article
Theater (2012) 42 (2): 119–137.
Published: 01 May 2012
... called the “media virus.” Observing an expansion of niche-interest,
grassroots journalism and entertainment — burgeoning cable television networks,
countercultural “zines,” and the rudimentary beginnings of the Internet — Rushkoff
set out to define a cultural trend that would grow exponentially...
Journal Article
Theater (2006) 36 (2): 95–102.
Published: 01 May 2006
... with low culture. Drawing inspiration from the World Wide Web, the Lysistrata
Project proposed through readings an ingenious, if simple, way theater could become
a maximally composite form, reflecting — and even embodying — important trends in
contemporary culture.
As the Internet broadens our...
Journal Article
Theater (2006) 36 (2): 103–110.
Published: 01 May 2006
... with low culture. Drawing inspiration from the World Wide Web, the Lysistrata
Project proposed through readings an ingenious, if simple, way theater could become
a maximally composite form, reflecting — and even embodying — important trends in
contemporary culture.
As the Internet broadens our...
Journal Article
Theater (2018) 48 (1): 5–19.
Published: 01 February 2018
... smartphones, gps trackers, drones,
and cameras. But, as Elise Morrison has pointed out, it is also shaping our identities:
Techniques and technologies of surveillance, particularly as they are developed to
chart the evolving terrain of the Internet and biometric technologies, have brought...
Journal Article
Theater (2017) 47 (2): 100–107.
Published: 01 May 2017
... episode of Horace and Pete, and I won’t forget it.
Horace and Pete, in other words, is a new rendition of what Philip Auslander
described as early television’s “ontology of liveness,” which contemporary Internet cul-
ture has at once surpassed...
Journal Article
Theater (2010) 40 (3): 43–53.
Published: 01 November 2010
....
32
Warner’s terms — introduced just as the Internet began redefining modes of pub-
33
lic circulation and forcing reconsiderations of what spectatorship means — still inform...
Journal Article
Theater (2013) 43 (3): 5–23.
Published: 01 November 2013
... risks remain a mystery.10 The
cloak of invisibility falls even more densely on virtual environments, such as online call
centers, as individuals will likely not realize that their Internet or phone wait time is a
8
surveillance art as participatory performance
result...
Journal Article
Theater (2018) 48 (1): 1–3.
Published: 01 February 2018
..., Germany, and others) engage in widespread spy-
ing on their own and foreign citizens using telephone and Internet. Snowden’s disclo-
sures prompted outrage in the international community and fallout along the political
spectrum; they also exposed the dubiety of still-cherished myths about...
Journal Article
Theater (2023) 53 (1): 30–41.
Published: 01 February 2023
...: The internet complex is the implacable engine of addiction, loneliness, false hopes, cruelty, psychosis, indebtedness, squandered life, the corrosion of memory, and social disintegration. All of its touted benefits are rendered irrelevant or secondary by its injurious and sociocidal impacts. 5 Unlike...
Journal Article
Theater (2015) 45 (3): 3–5.
Published: 01 November 2015
..., and banking, and Cuba agreed
to allow its citizens greater Internet access and to free fifty-three Cubans identified by
the United States as political prisoners, as well as releasing us government contractor
Alan P. Gross.
On June 2, 2015, the United States formally removed Cuba from its list...
Journal Article
Theater (2015) 45 (3): 1–3.
Published: 01 November 2015
..., and banking, and Cuba agreed
to allow its citizens greater Internet access and to free fifty-three Cubans identified by
the United States as political prisoners, as well as releasing us government contractor
Alan P. Gross.
On June 2, 2015, the United States formally removed Cuba from its list...
Journal Article
Theater (2010) 40 (2): 4–5.
Published: 01 May 2010
... writing for the stage necessarily playwriting? What should we call the collection
and arrangement of found texts — a strategy embraced by the first Internet generation,
raised on pastiche and now testing its capacities onstage? Or words created by some pro-
cess of research, improvisation...
Journal Article
Theater (2010) 40 (2): 2–4.
Published: 01 May 2010
... for the stage necessarily playwriting? What should we call the collection
and arrangement of found texts — a strategy embraced by the first Internet generation,
raised on pastiche and now testing its capacities onstage? Or words created by some pro-
cess of research, improvisation, or collaboration...
Journal Article
Theater (2008) 38 (3): 5–21.
Published: 01 November 2008
... to fade quickly from public view. Houchin argues the swift proliferation of internet and cable communication has protracted these debates, placing even greater pressure on artists, producers, and regulatory agencies. Houchin explores the impact of censorship vis-à-vis four events, events that all revolve...
Journal Article
Theater (2001) 31 (3): 139–151.
Published: 01 November 2001
...
workshops across the country to teach activists how to build puppets and do radical
street theater suitable to a variety of causes. Today’s activists also have the advantage of
new technologies like the Internet to aid in both national and international...
Journal Article
Theater (2010) 40 (2): 1.
Published: 01 May 2010
....
Reproduced by
permission. Photo:
Ryan M. Davis
Up Front
The Unscripted Future
Tom Sellar
Is all writing for the stage necessarily playwriting? What should we call the collection
and arrangement of found texts — a strategy embraced by the first Internet generation,
raised on pastiche...
Journal Article
Theater (2016) 46 (2): 35–53.
Published: 01 May 2016
... of hand-marked cardboard
signs, made a selection, and costumed themselves as the characters named on the signs
with clothes grabbed hastily from two nearby racks. Displaying the signs to the pact
audience — sigmund freud, an internet celebrity of no fixed talent, vladi-
mir putin...
Journal Article
Theater (1996) 27 (1): 83–98.
Published: 01 February 1996
... subsequent
NOVAK AND SELLAR
reports on the project (published in this magazine). Through boisterous conferences, co-
productions, Internet discussions, and a healthy number of new manifestoes, RAT people
have tried to make good on the original impulse for “a national service organization...
Journal Article
Theater (2024) 54 (1): 54–83.
Published: 01 February 2024
... whisper of those who, with great difficulty, are resisting. As Arundhati Roy states, There s really no such thing as the voiceless. There are only the deliberately silenced, or the preferably unheard. 4 After Jina s death, the government shut down the Internet and I had no access to my Women s Circle...
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