Resilience Thinking, Storytelling, and Aesthetic Resilience

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapterAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Resilience has become a buzzword that is used in different social fields and academic disciplines. This chapter unpacks shared elements and differences between the concept’s various uses, and explores the broader permeation of resilience thinking in visual culture and artistic practices. It offers close readings of recent resilience-themed films, Dirty God (2019) and Dreamaway (2018) to ask how resilience thinking relates art to the political, and if it may be used to engage viewers’ political imagination. In the chapter a distinction between masculine and feminine forms of resilience is sketched out. It argues that in order to understand how a tactics of aesthetic resilience is utilized for political affect in contemporary art and activist film, one needs to pay attention to the development and production of the stories as well as their contents and textual form.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationArt and Activism in the Age of Systemic Crisis
Subtitle of host publicationAesthetic Resilience
EditorsEliza Steinbock, Bram Leven, Marijke de Valck
Place of PublicationNew York
PublisherRoutledge
Chapter1
Pages9-23
Number of pages15
Edition1
ISBN (Electronic)9780429269189
ISBN (Print)9780367219840
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 8 Oct 2020

Publication series

NameRoutledge Research in Art and Politics
PublisherRoutledge

Keywords

  • film
  • activism
  • political imagination
  • disfigurement
  • resilience
  • aesthetics
  • Sharm-el Skeikh
  • Dirty God
  • Dreamaway
  • Dynasties
  • neoliberalism

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