Author: Rafael Magadia

  • Performance Studies international # 30

    Performance Studies international # 30

    Conference Theme: XXX – Cruzo, Cruising, Crossroads

    11 to 15 December 2025

    Different senses of crossing animate PSi#30. First as a written mark, the three Xs of the Roman numeral that represent “30” here cast the reading into a polysemic realm of competing/collaborating linguistic and cultural forces: secrecy, mystery, incognito, redaction, overwriting, an algebraic variable, an unknown value, non-binary gender, refusal, aphasia, disorder, error, intersectional pathways, intersecting diagonals, proliferating angles, multiplication, lack, blocked, out, hardcore sex, danger, a sacral point, a “something”, a “thing”, the unspecified, a target, a treasure, the vote, the kiss.

    The undecidability of the x-thing is held onto here as a sign of complexity, not imprecision. It imparts a critical quality of inconclusiveness that bespeaks the diversified and often conflicting modes of reception and mobilization of Performance Studies in Latin America. For some, another colonizing trend from the academic elite; for others a fresh, rebellious framework enabling the torsion of academic coloniality. From the standpoint of the crossroad, which this conference intends to embrace, the vibrating energy produced by the paradox is way more fertile than the attempt to settle for a conclusion.

  • PSi#31 and CIS#6 Jakarta 2026: Archipelagic Flows -Performance Studies international (PSi) and the Critical Island Studies Consortium (CIS) 2026 Joint Annual Conference

    PSi#31 and CIS#6 Jakarta 2026: Archipelagic Flows -Performance Studies international (PSi) and the Critical Island Studies Consortium (CIS) 2026 Joint Annual Conference

    Extension of Call for Proposals for PSi #31 in Jakarta

    The earth is also an archipelago, and focusing on the performance in and of smaller iterations perhaps schools us in the methods we need to hold true to geographical actuality across ever greater expanses of sea and land. Once you start thinking about archipelagos, you cannot get far without encountering another island, measuring its distance from the last one, and registering it in all its particularity. (Paul Rae 2019)

    Call for Papers

    The Performance Studies international (PSi) 2015 Fluid States conference reimagined the traditional academic gathering by dissolving the centralized conference model into a distributed, year-long series of gatherings across fifteen global sites, including the Philippines. This innovative format embodied its conceptual framework: challenging hierarchical knowledge structures and embracing fluidity as both metaphor and material reality.

    Partnering with the Critical Island Studies Consortium, mainly based in Southeast Asia, for PSi#31 in 2026, Performance Studies international takes up the theme ‘Archipelagic Flows’ to reopen spaces of discussion and flows of discourse-making opened up by Fluid States, exploring areas of mutual research interest with critical island studies.

    The archipelago is not only a geophysical, geographical, topographical, or geopolitical formation; in the conception of theorist Edouard Glissant, it is, more importantly, a figure of lateral relation.

    [The archipelago is] a place where we can begin to understand and resolve the contradictions of the world. Across the many islands of the archipelagos of the world, interdependence and difference coexist—and, in this way, they carry the energy that is necessary for the whole globe, our whole world. (Glissant and Obrist 2021: 19)

    The archipelago is ’a poetics of how we organize the world’. Our understanding of this notion and the idea that this is what the world needs becomes clearer when Glissant opposes archipelagic thinking to the dominant continental worldview.

    Continents weigh us down. They are thick and sumptuous. Archipelagos are able to diffract, they create diversity and expansiveness, they are spaces of relation that recognize all the infinite details of the real. Being in harmony with the world through archipelagos means inhabiting this diffraction, while still rallying coastlines and joining horizons. They open us to a sea of wandering: to ambiguity, to fragility, to drifting, which is not the same as futility. (20-21)

    While we are seemingly faced with another binary of archipelago versus continent, a diffracted and ‘quantum’ understanding’ (such as that proposed by Karen Barad) of the power of the archipelagic counter-discourse is what the conference proposes—to unpack, investigate, and in so doing harness and rally for the common aspirations that surely drive our work as artists and academics.

    Globality, mondialité… Globality does not homogenize culture. It produces a difference from which new things can emerge. Globality equips us to combat globalization, which… standardizes and dilutes. Globalization reduces communities to a single model, attacking them from the top down, diminishing them. So we need a sense of a world community, of globality, or we cannot combat globalization. (Glissant and Obrist 22-23)

    The idea of flows takes from the Fluid States notion of ‘fluxes, density and currents’ of the world ocean, where the archipelagos of the world are connected by the waters, to instantiate both movement and change— movement within and among islands, interactions, and exchanges among the peoples, societies, and cultures in their particularities on those islands, economic exchange, trade and commerce, and so on, and the changes that result from these movements.

    We have to accept that our world changes radically and perpetually, and that it changes with us and in us, and that we have an obligation to perceive, to intuit, to sense this change. That’s how we reach utopia. (Glissant and Obrist 69)

    Elsewhere in Archipelago Conversations, Glissant says, ‘Our utopia is accepting the idea of change…’ (67)

    Thus, the concept of ‘archipelagic flows’ emerges as a vital framework for reimagining world-making in our current global context – a world fractured by conflict, systemic violence, and unprecedented threats to human and non-human life on a planetary scale. Drawing on the metaphor of island archipelagos, this approach addresses a crucial question: How can distinct communities maintain their autonomy while fostering necessary interconnections in the face of ecocide, deepening inequalities, and widespread impoverishment? Karen Barad’s notion of existing “together apart” offers a productive lens for understanding how we might cultivate flourishing conditions across differences. This framework bridges insights from performance studies and critical island studies, suggesting new methodologies for survival and coexistence that transcend simple binaries of isolation versus connection. Like islands in an archipelago, communities can maintain their distinctive characteristics while participating in larger networks of mutual support and exchange, creating resilient systems capable of addressing contemporary challenges while preserving cultural and ecological diversity.

  • PSi 2023: Uhambo Luyazilawula – Embodied Wandering Practices

    PSi 2023: Uhambo Luyazilawula – Embodied Wandering Practices

    Internationally acclaimed arts and research association, Performance Studies international (PSi), in partnership with the Wits Theatre and Performance and Drama for Life departments, are hosting the first Performance Studies Conference in Africa in August 2023. 

    The conference is grounded through Uhambo, an IsiZulu word that translates to ‘a journey’. As such, the conference theme follows the phrase uhambo luyazilawula, which loosely translates to ‘a journey controls itself.’ Thus, through a recognition of mobility, journeying, movement and migration, the conference positions itself as the springboard from which contemporary creative research and scholarship about Performance Studies can be produced about Africans and by Africans. 

    The conference, which will host traditional presentations of academic papers and panel discussions, also seeks to prioritise creative research and arts-based practices as legitimate means of knowledge production on Performance Studies methodologies in Africa, centering Wits School of Arts and Johannesburg as the creative hub of embodied epistemologies in this interdisciplinary field.

    The conference, in both its theme and structure, intends to apply the embodied practice of traveling, of moving, and of journeying – between spaces, places, and locations. The wandering nature of the conference thus manifests the practice of ‘ukuhamba’ through collaborative partnerships with other creative and cultural venues in Johannesburg, both onsite and online. The aim of positioning the conference as a moving, blended conference is to embrace the practice of mapping people, spaces and cultures that are located in the various places and venues. This opens the conference up to an embodied practice of wandering that does not confine and lock cultural, creative and pedagogical exchanges to one space.

  • PSi #29: Assemble

    PSi #29: Assemble

    Performance Studies international are delighted to announce the Call for Proposals for PSi #29, which will be hosted by The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama in Collaboration with LIFT (the London International Theatre Festival) on 20-23 June 2024.

    This hybrid conference focuses on the main theme of Assemble. To assemble has multiple meanings: to gather in one place for a common purpose or to put together the parts of something. Resonant with infrastructures, politics and processes of assemblage, the conference invites and foregrounds practice research, creative critical interventions, processes of making and their antithesis, un-making. In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, the climate crisis and global struggles for justice and recognition, we have to reconsider how to assemble, how to come together, to build, to imagine, to co-create in hostile conditions, and, conversely, what we need to disassemble, to take apart, to dismantle, to decenter, to unlearn.