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Introduction: Towards an Ethics of Gesture
Author(s) -
Lucia Ruprecht
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
performance philosophy/performance philosophy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2947-5589
pISSN - 2057-7176
DOI - 10.21476/pp.2017.31167
Subject(s) - gesture , situated , object (grammar) , aesthetics , sociology , nexus (standard) , epistemology , embodied cognition , art , philosophy , computer science , linguistics , artificial intelligence , embedded system
The introduction to this special section of Performance Philosophy takes Giorgio Agambens remarks about the mediality and potentiality of gesture as a starting point to rethink gestures nexus with ethics. Shifting the emphasis from philosophical reflection to corporeal practice, it defines gestural ethics as an acting-otherwise which comes into being in the particularities of singular gestural practice, its forms, kinetic qualities, temporal displacements and calls for response. Gestural acting-otherwise is illustrated in a number of ways: We might talk of a gestural ethics when gesturality becomes an object for dedicated analytical exploration and reflection on sites where it is not taken for granted, but exhibited, on stage or on screen, in its mediality, in the ways it quotes, signifies and departs from signification, but also in the ways in which it follows a forward-looking agenda driven by adaptability and inventiveness. It interrupts or modifies operative continua that might be geared towards violence; it appears in situations that are suspended between the possibility of malfunction and the potential of room for play; and it emerges in the ways in which gestures act on their own implication in the signifying structures of gender, sexuality, race, and class, on how these structures play out relationally across time and space, and between historically and locally situated human beings.

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