Available Formats
Postdigital Performances of Care: Technology & Pandemic
By (Author) Liam Jarvis
By (author) Karen Savage
Series edited by Liam Jarvis
Series edited by Karen Savage
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Methuen Drama
24th July 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Media studies: internet, digital media and society
Ethics and moral philosophy
792.09052
Paperback
136
Width 129mm, Height 198mm
Covid-19 has been described as a digital pandemic. But who might the characterisation of the pandemic as digital leave behind This timely book reconsiders the pandemic as postdigital, examining tensions between a growing postdigital attitude of disenchantment with digital technologies and the increasing reliance on adapted modes of online practice mid-lockdown in both performance-making and healthcare. What emerged amidst the pandemic restrictions was a theatre that was unable to show its face, instead adapting into a variety of covid-safe remote forms of engagement, from Zoom plays to self-generating experiences sent by post. This book explores the ways that both performances and healthcare practices found proxies for direct touch and face-to-face encounters, deconstructing the way that care and resilience were spectacularized by political actors online. Liam Jarvis and Karen Savage explore aspects of care in relation to technology, spectacle and facilitation, and how new modes of delivery and the repurposing of theatre spaces that were displaced amidst the mass migration online have been enabling as well as controversial. The variety of case studies assessed includes internet memes, online films, performances of everyday resilience through social media and participatory theatre productions, including Thaddeus Phillips Zoom Motel, Coneys Telephone and Nightcaps Handle with Care.
As theatre and performance struggle to emerge in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic, Postdigital Performances of Care provides a distinct lens through which to review our collective experiences and to reimagine possibilities for the future. Critical, insightful and compassionate throughout, the book reflects on the many meanings of care and challenges us to reconsider the "new normal". The authors present a compelling provocation for the field and how we might rethink performance itself in the current context. * Sarah Bay-Cheng, York University, Canada *
Liam Jarvis is a theatre-maker, practitioner-researcher, Co-director of the Centre for Theatre Research (CTR) and Senior Lecturer in the Department of Literature, Film and Theatre Studies at the University of Essex, UK. Karen Savage is Head of Arts, Culture and Heritage for the College of Arts and Professor of Creative and Collaborative Arts at the University of Lincoln, UK.