The STR New Researchers' Network invites papers for a special edition of Theatre Notebook focused on the theme of "absence." Lockdowns imposed to stop the spread of COVID19 are forcing scholars to engage with absence in all of its various forms. Performances have been cancelled, archives are closed, families are separated and a ‘new normal’ has emerged. In these strange times, as scholars are forced to reconsider both the impact and value of absences as creative stimuli, the NRN seek papers that discuss, evaluate, and engage with absences, or gaps, in Theatre and Performance research.
Topics may cover, but are not limited to:
- Gaps in theatre history and archives
- Absence of the audience, censorship and deliberate erasure
- The status of the ‘off-stage’ space: ‘Exits’ as ‘Entrances’ elsewhere
- Taking the star’s place: Under-studying as practice and in particular cases silence and absence of voice
- Things not represented on the stage: The productive use of ‘absences’ in performance
- Withholding the facts: How theatrical practices make use of missing information, uncertainties, and doubts
- Lost spaces of performance
- Theatrical cutting
We are particularly interested in providing opportunities for new scholars and early career researchers. Theatre Notebook is a journal of the history and technique of the British theatre. It interprets theatre widely, covering theatrical activities inside and outside theatre buildings, professional and amateur theatre, the business of theatre, stage design, the history of theatre buildings, acting technique, and theatre outside the British Isles that relates directly to the history and technique of British theatre.
Please send abstracts of 500 words (maximum) as PDF or .doc(x) attachments to nrn@str.org.uk and theatrenotebook@str.org.uk by Monday 8th March 2021. Abstracts will be considered anonymously so they should not contain any identification within the attachment itself. Final submissions for the selected essays of 5000 words (maximum) will be Monday 3rd May 2021. All enquiries are welcome.