Going 'Live' Again: Reflections on Zoom, Copresence, & Liveness in a (Post)Pandemic World
Autor: | Carla Neuss |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: | |
Zdroj: | Theatre Survey. 62:336-339 |
ISSN: | 1475-4533 0040-5574 |
DOI: | 10.1017/s0040557421000259 |
Popis: | In April 2020—only weeks after the World Health Organization declared COVID-19 a global pandemic—the New York Times published an article titled “Why Zoom Is Terrible.” Quoting a gustatory simile from Sheryl Brahnam of Missouri State University, the article declared, “In-person communication resembles video conferencing about as much as a real blueberry muffin resembles a packaged blueberry muffin that contains not a single blueberry but artificial flavors, textures and preservatives.”1 It has been a year marked by the absence of “in-person” connection, or in the language of our field, of spatial copresence. The COVID-19 pandemic has fundamentally disrupted our ability to share space. Spatial copresence, it turns out, is what the coronavirus requires to spread. The virus, in this sense, is a phenomenon of the live. While technologies like Zoom have maintained our capacity for temporal copresence, the now ubiquitous status of “Zoom fatigue” points to new ways to consider spatial copresence, and by extension “liveness.” |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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