Najava gostovanja Branislava Jakovljevića
BRANISLAV JAKOVLJEVIĆ (DEPARTMENT OF THEATER AND
PERFORMANCE STUDIES, STANFORD UNIVERSITY) GOSTUJE NA
ODSJEKU DRAMATURGIJE I ADU U SKLOPU SERIJE PREDAVANJA I
RADIONICA “INTRODUCING DRAMATURGY STUDIES”.
GOSTOVANJE ORGANIZIRAMO UZ POMOĆ DONACIJE PROMOTING
AMERICAN ARTS AND EDUCATION VELEPOSLANSTVA SJEDINJENIH
AMERIČKIH DRŽAVA U ZAGREBU
Branislav Jakovljević održat će javno predavanje, a potom i radionicu za
studente dramaturgije u tjednu od 24. do 29. ožujka 2014. Teme najavljujemo
uskoro.
Branislav Jakovljevic is an Associate Professor at the Department of Theater
and Performance Studies, Stanford University. He specializes in avant-garde and
experimental theater, performance theory, critical theory, and performance and
politics. He has published essays on a broad variety of subjects, from history of late
nineteenth-century theater, to Russian and Soviet avant-garde, to contemporary
American experimental performance. His works have been published in the United
States (Theatre Journal, TDR, PAJ, Art Journal, Theater) and in Europe (Serbia, United
Kingdom, Spain, Sweden, Croatia, Poland, and Belgium). His book Daniil Kharms:
Writing and the Event was published by Northwestern University Press in 2009. He
recently completed his second book manuscript, Beyond the Performance Principle:
Self-Management and Conceptual Art in Yugoslavia. In 2009, he received Association
for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) 2009 Outstanding Article Award for
the essay “From Mastermind to Body Artist: Political Performances of Slobodan
Milosevic” (published in TDR 52:1, 2008). He was a recipient of the Theodore and
Frances Geballe Research Workshops, Stanford Humanities Center, 2011-2012
for the project “Art as Documentation, Memory as Art,” (2011-2012), and in 2009
he received prestigious Hellman Faculty Scholar Award for the project "Province
without Borders: Yugoslav Conflict from Local Politics to Global Justice." In 2013
he chaired 19th annual Performance Studies international conference "Now Then:
Performance and Temporality" at Stanford University.