About this issue

Forfattere

  • Cecilie Ullerup Schmidt
  • Franziska Bork-Petersen
  • Jonas Schnor
  • Karen Vedel

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.7146/peri.v21i39.152280

Forfatterbiografier

Cecilie Ullerup Schmidt

is an associate professor in Cultural Studies and Performance Studies and deputy director of the Art as Forum research centre at the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen. From a feminist-materialist perspective her research centres production aesthetics, particularly in relation to structural precarity, infrastructural discrimination, and self-organisation. With postdoc Anna Meera Gaonkar she is co-directing the research project Communities of Separatism. Affects in and around Separatist  Collectives by Racialised Artists and Cultural Workers (2022-24). Most recently she co-edited the anthology Infrastructure Aesthetics (2024).

Franziska Bork-Petersen

is an associate professor in Performance Studies at the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen. She is a member of the research project Knowing in Motion. Dance, body, archive (2023-26). Her writings on performance art, fashion, dance and digital bodies have appeared in Performance Research, Nordic Theatre Studies and MedieKultur: Journal of media and communication research. Her latest book publication Body Utopianism: Prosthetic Being Between Enhancement and Estrangement (2022) explores the paradoxical relationship between bodies and utopianism.

Jonas Schnor

is a postdoctoral researcher in Performance Studies at the Research Centre for Visual Poetics, University of Antwerp, and external lecturer at the Theatre and Performance Studies section at the Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen. They have worked as a freelance dance critic for bastard.blog and their research on dance and ecology, collective creation and practice-based dance making has appeared in Performance Research, Performance Philosophy Journal and Critical Stages/Scènes critiques.

Karen Vedel

is an associate professor in Theatre and Performance Studies, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen. Coming from a professional background in dance, she has worked extensively to further the visibility of dance and choreography as an art form in Denmark – both in the cultural political arena and in academia. Her widely published research centres on dance historiography and critical heritage studies. She is project leader of the research project Knowing in Motion. Dance, body, archive (2023-2026).

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Publiceret

2024-12-17

Citation/Eksport

Ullerup Schmidt, C., Bork-Petersen, F., Schnor, J., & Vedel, K. (2024). About this issue. Peripeti, 21(39), 30–35. https://doi.org/10.7146/peri.v21i39.152280

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Sektion

Redaktionelt Forord