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For all events, the Department of Performance Studies acknowledges the Canarsie tribe of the Lenape People in whose traditional territory we are gathering.
For all events, the Department of Performance Studies acknowledges the Canarsie tribe of the Lenape People in whose traditional territory we are gathering.
Save the date for the Performance Studies Undergraduate Orientation. It will take place Wednesday, August 28th, from 9:30am to 11:00am at 721 Broadway, 6th Floor, Room 613.
Incoming Performance Studies B.A students are invited for a special tour of The Whitney Museum of American Art.
The department welcomes our incoming students, returning students, faculty, staff and members of the Performance Studies Community to mix and mingle over food, drinks, pick up a copy of this shared text, Disidentification, and some fun!
A conversation with P.A. Skantze and Fred Moten about Skantze, new book.
Join us for a poetry reading by Matthew Fink
How do we make art, and sense, out of the often-uninvited things that happen to us? Choices in conditions not of our choosing? Please join us for a reading of Jennifer Doyle's "Letting Go," an account of the experience of being a stalking and harassment victim; a screening of Aliza Shvarts’ film Nonconsensual Collaborations, which documents performances with artists who did not agree to their participation; and a moderated discussion with Barbara Browning in which we explore different tactics for truth-telling and truth-shifting, as well as how narrative strategies can enact a reparative process.
Fourth Annual José Esteban Muñoz Memorial Event
A conversation about identity with Yarden Stern, Tali Keren, ita Segev, Shirly Bahar.
Get to know your PS faculty better over some coffee and sweets!
A Book Talk by Dorinne Kondo to discuss her new work.
Join Performance Studies and Art and Public Policy for a luncheon to bring our faculty, students, and staff together as a celebration of Tisch's Day of Community.
It is our pleasure to announce PRAXIS, INC: Innovate, Network, Collaborate, which will take place Saturday, October 19, 2019!
Join us for our annual Open House for undergraduate prospective students and their families.
Join us for the celebratory launch of Jacqueline Loss’s original translation of Jorge Mañach’s essay “Inquiry into Choteo.”
We invite prospective students to attend the open house to learn more about our graduate degree programs. The session will provide an overview of our master’s and doctoral programs, an introduction to our faculty and their research, an opportunity to meet with current students and admissions staff.
This talk discusses the work of artist-researchers such as Tru Paraha and Cat Ruka who draw on transcultural poetics, performance writing, and post-human attention that is moved by the vitality of dirt, matter and black-out states.
Get to know your PS faculty better over some coffee and sweets!
In this reading, Ruiz challenges the colonization of time and our normative assumptions of negation, incompletion, exhaustion, endurance, and violence, alongside moments of pleasure, desire, and redemption. A theorization of Ricanness, as the author expresses, supplies a relational way to imagine, dream, and construct alternate forms of existence under colonialism, across bodies of water and beyond the annexation of land.
Join us to celebrate the end of the semester with some holiday cheer!
Join us to share your voice and to celebrate the end of a wonderful semester!
Get to know your PS faculty better over some coffee and sweets!
Deeply indebted to the work of Muñoz, this symposium reunites and puts into public conversation a cohort of four of his students -- Sareh Afshar, Joshua Guzmán, Summer Kim Lee, and Daniel J Sander.
PS is excited to host a screening of the film FAHAVALO followed by a Q&A with the filmmaker Marie-Clémence Andriamonta Paes.
Join us in conversation with Pêdra Costa, a Brazilian-German Performance Artist and Visual & Urban Anthropologist, based in Berlin and working with queer artists internationally.
Join Performance Studies for PANEL, a performance by Autumn Knight and featuring a panel of PhD candidates from the department.