Sustainability

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportAntologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Sustainability. / Buch, Sandra (Redaktør); Gade, Solveig (Redaktør); Houe, Lise Sofie (Redaktør); Nielsen, Thomas Rosendal (Redaktør); Schmidt, Yvonne (Redaktør).

37 udg. 2022. 253 s.

Publikation: Bog/antologi/afhandling/rapportAntologiForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Buch, S, Gade, S, Houe, LS, Nielsen, TR & Schmidt, Y (red) 2022, Sustainability. bind 19, 37 udg. <https://tidsskrift.dk/peripeti/issue/view/9891>

APA

Buch, S., Gade, S., Houe, L. S., Nielsen, T. R., & Schmidt, Y. (red.) (2022). Sustainability. (37 udg.) https://tidsskrift.dk/peripeti/issue/view/9891

Vancouver

Buch S, (ed.), Gade S, (ed.), Houe LS, (ed.), Nielsen TR, (ed.), Schmidt Y, (ed.). Sustainability. 37 udg. 2022. 253 s.

Author

Buch, Sandra (Redaktør) ; Gade, Solveig (Redaktør) ; Houe, Lise Sofie (Redaktør) ; Nielsen, Thomas Rosendal (Redaktør) ; Schmidt, Yvonne (Redaktør). / Sustainability. 37 udg. 2022. 253 s.

Bibtex

@book{c157f49c762c4e59a6199fe0a5645958,
title = "Sustainability",
abstract = "This issue of Peripeti is dedicated to sustainable theatre and performance practices. The urgency of rethinking and reimagining human activity has become increasingly obvious as the massive ecological catastrophes resulting from climate change and mass extinction have entered our horizons. The answer to this has been coined {\textquoteleft}sustainability{\textquoteright}, a word that at the same time poses a serious challenge for all sectors of society, and runs the risk of degenerating into just another buzzword. In this issue, we interrogate, specify, and challenge the concept of sustainability in relation to theatre and performance practices within a broad range of circumstances and geographical areas. We encounter theatre and performance practices that directly engage with ecologies between human and non-human agents, practices that emphasise the need to reuse, replenish, and respect resources in the course of theatre production, and practices that insist on forms of sustainability that care and takes care of every-body.",
editor = "Sandra Buch and Solveig Gade and Houe, {Lise Sofie} and Nielsen, {Thomas Rosendal} and Yvonne Schmidt",
note = "S{\ae}rnummer af Peripeti.",
year = "2022",
language = "English",
volume = "19",
edition = "37",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Sustainability

A2 - Buch, Sandra

A2 - Gade, Solveig

A2 - Houe, Lise Sofie

A2 - Nielsen, Thomas Rosendal

A2 - Schmidt, Yvonne

N1 - Særnummer af Peripeti.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This issue of Peripeti is dedicated to sustainable theatre and performance practices. The urgency of rethinking and reimagining human activity has become increasingly obvious as the massive ecological catastrophes resulting from climate change and mass extinction have entered our horizons. The answer to this has been coined ‘sustainability’, a word that at the same time poses a serious challenge for all sectors of society, and runs the risk of degenerating into just another buzzword. In this issue, we interrogate, specify, and challenge the concept of sustainability in relation to theatre and performance practices within a broad range of circumstances and geographical areas. We encounter theatre and performance practices that directly engage with ecologies between human and non-human agents, practices that emphasise the need to reuse, replenish, and respect resources in the course of theatre production, and practices that insist on forms of sustainability that care and takes care of every-body.

AB - This issue of Peripeti is dedicated to sustainable theatre and performance practices. The urgency of rethinking and reimagining human activity has become increasingly obvious as the massive ecological catastrophes resulting from climate change and mass extinction have entered our horizons. The answer to this has been coined ‘sustainability’, a word that at the same time poses a serious challenge for all sectors of society, and runs the risk of degenerating into just another buzzword. In this issue, we interrogate, specify, and challenge the concept of sustainability in relation to theatre and performance practices within a broad range of circumstances and geographical areas. We encounter theatre and performance practices that directly engage with ecologies between human and non-human agents, practices that emphasise the need to reuse, replenish, and respect resources in the course of theatre production, and practices that insist on forms of sustainability that care and takes care of every-body.

M3 - Anthology

VL - 19

BT - Sustainability

ER -

ID: 372692819