National Repository of Grey Literature 2 records found  Search took 0.01 seconds. 
Multilogues on the Now. Disability and gender in contemporary feminist curating
Jakalová, Zuzana ; Štefková, Zuzana (referee) ; Pospiszyl, Tomáš (referee) ; Zálešák, Jan (advisor)
Dissertation entitled Multilogues on the Now. Dis/ability and gender in contemporary feminist curating offers a reflection and a theoretical framework of the curatorial methods developed and applied during a long-term exhibition project Multilogues on the Now (2017 - 2022) that took place in Display - association for research and collective practice in Prague. Through a series of exhibitions, discussions, screenings, commissioned artworks, publications, shared meals and workshops, the project’s aim was to comprehensively formulate questions related to bodily autonomy, emancipatory needs for self-determination, social frameworks and nuances of impairment and "disability" and ableist exclusion and discrimination their basis, or the material nature of the non-normative lived experience. The dissertation anchors the project in the context of current debates surrounding curatorial research, intersectional feminist curating informed by critical disability studies. It also emphasizes the importance of auto-theory and embodied perspectives on life with illness and disability in contemporary curatroial practice.
Multilogues on the Now. Disability and gender in contemporary feminist curating
Jakalová, Zuzana ; Štefková, Zuzana (referee) ; Pospiszyl, Tomáš (referee) ; Zálešák, Jan (advisor)
Dissertation entitled Multilogues on the Now. Dis/ability and gender in contemporary feminist curating offers a reflection and a theoretical framework of the curatorial methods developed and applied during a long-term exhibition project Multilogues on the Now (2017 - 2022) that took place in Display - association for research and collective practice in Prague. Through a series of exhibitions, discussions, screenings, commissioned artworks, publications, shared meals and workshops, the project’s aim was to comprehensively formulate questions related to bodily autonomy, emancipatory needs for self-determination, social frameworks and nuances of impairment and "disability" and ableist exclusion and discrimination their basis, or the material nature of the non-normative lived experience. The dissertation anchors the project in the context of current debates surrounding curatorial research, intersectional feminist curating informed by critical disability studies. It also emphasizes the importance of auto-theory and embodied perspectives on life with illness and disability in contemporary curatroial practice.

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