Curatorial Practices for Intersectional Programming

Authors

  • Cara Hagan Appalachian State University, ADF's Movies by Movers

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18061/ijsd.v9i0.6046

Keywords:

Screendance, Curation, Programming, Discrimination, Race, Film, Media

Abstract

Screendance finds its roots in the traditions of concert dance, museum culture, and film festivals. Film festivals - from which we borrow the structure for programming screendance - boast a history of discrimination towards bodies of color, varied gender expressions, bodies of different abilities, and more. Through an exploration of the history and socio-cultural context of film festivals in the west and dialogue with curators and directors from a handful of screendance festivals across the United States, this piece will present a set of curatorial challenges particular to our field, the creative solutions being explored by presenters and champions of screendance, and a consideration of where the field falls short, so we can better mitigate issues of underrepresentation of marginalized groups in screendance spaces.

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Published

2018-06-19

How to Cite

Hagan, C. (2018). Curatorial Practices for Intersectional Programming. The International Journal of Screendance, 9. https://doi.org/10.18061/ijsd.v9i0.6046

Issue

Section

Articles