Note: This work of creative scholarship is rooted in collaboration between three female artist-scholars: Carly Bates, Raji Ganesan, and Allyson Yoder. Working from a common intersectional, feminist framework, we served as artistic co-directors of each other’s solo pieces and co-producers of Negotiations, in which we share these pieces alongside each other. Negotiations is not a showcase of three individual works, but a conversation among three voices. As collaborators, we have been uncompromising in the pursuit of our own unique inquiries and voices and each of our works of creative scholarship stand alone. However, we believe that all of the parts are best understood in relationship to each other and to the whole. For this reason, we have chosen to cross-reference our thesis documents here, and we encourage readers to view the performance of Negotiations in its entirety.
Thesis documents cross-referenced:
French Vanilla: An Exploration of Biracial Identity Through Narrative Performance, by Carly Bates
Bhairavi: A Performance-Investigation of Belonging and Dis-Belonging in Diaspora Communities, by Raji Ganesan
Deep roots, shared fruits: Emergent creative process and the ecology of solo performance through “Dress in Something Plain and Dark,” by Allyson Yoder
Amanda Federico’s Honors Thesis Creative Project, The Cyberfem Experience, is a 38-minute technofeminist satire comedy show comprised of ten original sketches told within a synthesized multimedia format. The show opens a conversation on modern feminist issues by imagining and staging possible situations affecting women and other marginalized groups that may arise in time from the current state of our technology, cyberspace, and political climate. The Cyberfem Experience wields the approachable avenue of comedy to explore and demonstrate how technology might be utilized–within the industry, online communities, or through the design of technology itself–to perpetuate biases, harmful sexual fantasies, dangerous subgroup ideologies, and enforce roles/conditions of women in a patriarchal society.