1. Introduction; Marie-Louise Crawley, Katerina Paramana, Imogen Racz, and Sarah Whatley.2. 'Networked Commensals: Bodily, relational and performative affordances of sharing food remotely'; Cinzia Cremona.3. 'Unsound Bodies: Mapping manifolds in/of the dance'; Elise Nuding.4. 'TV, Body and Landscape: Nam June Paik's Show (2016)'; Yuh, J. Hwang.5. 'Please Do Not Touch: Dancing with the sculptural works of Robert Therrien'; Marie-Louise Crawley.6. 'The Holding Space: Body of (as) knowledge'; Sally Doughty, Lisa Kendall, and Rachel Krische.7. 'Contextualising the Developing Self in Helen Chadwick's Ego Geometria Sum'; Imogen Racz.8. 'Cutting Onions, Cooking Stew: Stabilizing the unstable in Mexico City'; Ruth Hellier.9. 'Series and Relics. On the presence of remainders in performance's museum'; Susanne Foellmer.10. 'Knitting Connection with the Red Ladies: Walking, remembering, transforming'; Sophie Lally.11. 'A Dance After All Hell Broke Loose: Mourning as 'Quiet' in Ralph Lemon's How Can You Stay in the House All Day and Not Go Anywhere?"'; Alison Bory.12. 'Theatre as FOMO: Metonymic spaces of William Forsythe's KAMMER/KAMMER'; Tamara Tomic-Vajagic.13. 'Broken Homes and Haunted Houses'; Gill Perry.14. 'The Monumental and the Mundane: Living with public art in London's East End'; Robert James Sutton.
About the Author: Sarah Whatley is Director of the Centre for Dance Research (C-DaRE), Coventry University, UK. Her research focuses on dance analysis, digital dance resources, dance and disability, and intangible cultural heritage. She has published widely on these themes and is founding Editor of the Journal of Dance and Somatic Practices.
Katerina Paramana is a Lecturer in Theatre and Performance at Brunel University London, UK. Her research is concerned with the socio-political and ethical dimensions of contemporary performance. It has been published with Performance Research, GPS, CTR, and Dance Research journals. She is co-editor of the interdisciplinary book series Dance in Dialogue.
Imogen Racz is Assistant Professor in Art History at Coventry University, UK. Her research focuses on post-war sculptural practices, with a special emphasis on the home, memory, identity, and belonging. She has published widely, including her forthcoming book British Art of the Long 1980s: Diverse Practices, Exhibitions and Infrastructures (2020).
Marie-Louise Crawley is a choreographer, dancer, and researcher. She is research assistant at C-DaRE (Centre for Dance Research), Coventry University, UK, and an Early Career Associate of the Archive of Performance of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford, UK.
Marie-Louise is an Early Career Associate of the Archive of Performance of Greek and Roman Drama, University of Oxford, UK, and a choreographer, dancer, and researcher. She is currently a research assistant at C-DaRE (Centre for Dance Research, Coventry University, UK).