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“You’ve Got to Know How to Speak Animalese”: Literary Explorations of Engagements with the Animal Other

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Jessica Murray
University of South Africa, Pretoria, South Africa. Email: murraj@unica.ac.za. ORCID: 0000-0001-8383-2459

[Received 25 May 2023, modified 26 July 2023, accepted 27 July 2023, first published 27 July 2023]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.20
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Abstract

As the harmful impact of anthropogenic activity on the environment becomes increasingly glaring, it has become more urgent than ever to find more ethical and sustainable ways of engaging with the other animals with whom we share space. From extreme weather events to food supply disruptions and species extinctions, it is no longer possible to cling to the hubristic myth of an independent human who exercises dominion over nature. Our actions and choices have very real, immediate, and often unintended environmental consequences and our own species survival depends on accepting this inter-dependent reality in a spirit of respectful responsibility. While climate change is now widely considered to be an issue that demands serious attention, this article will argue that any attempt to foster greater environmental care will be compromised if we fail to listen to the voices of the animal other. I will explore the ways in which other animals try to speak and the challenges that inevitably arise when attempting to hear those voices by anchoring my argument in a literary analysis of selected contemporary novels. I will demonstrate that, even when authors represent characters who care deeply about the environment, animals tend to fall through the cracks of their activist commitments, and they repeatedly turn away from opportunities to listen respectfully to the voices of animals.

Keywords:  Animal, voice, listening, climate change, violence, environment, contemporary fiction

[Sustainable Development Goals: Climate Action, Life on Land]

Book Review: The Collected Works of Jim Morrison: Poetry, Journals, Transcripts, and Lyrics

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2nd Edition, Harper Design, USA, 2022, pp.584, price- 50$

Reviewed by

Dwaipayan Roy

Research Scholar, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of Technology Mizoram, Chaltlang, Aizawl, Mizoram, India. Email- brucewayne130@gmail.com.

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.19
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A musical enigma or a poet? Jim Morrison seems to fit both quite easily. There are several biographies of Jim Morrison and his cult rock band, “Doors”. But no other book offers a treat to Jim Morrison fans across the globe like The Collected Works of Jim Morrison. This anthology is the result of a collaboration between Harper Design (an imprint of Harper Collins publication) and the Jim Morrison Estate. An engaging combination of 160 photographs and Morrison’s own comments on the work accompany the text throughout the book. These include fragments from his 28 secretly owned journals. This book is like an archive for all Jim Morrison lovers; it contains manuscripts, drafts, diaries, lyrics, poetry, and a script written by the legend in his own handwriting, which has never been printed previously. A striking fact about the book is that its cover is printed with the name “James Douglas Morrison,” a name that Morrison preferred all his life when it came to publishing. The book, once opened, mesmerizes the readers with its stunning 582 color pages, drawing inspiration and retaining the originality of the rocker’s notebook from his schooldays (spanning over 100 pages). Readers will be delighted by the random snippets of poetry and lyrics from his iconic rock band, “The Doors,” the inclusion of which indeed makes it a collector’s edition. That’s not all. This anthology also comes as an audio book. The readers can dip themselves in the shamanic voice of the rocker through the legendary poetry recording by Morrison in West Los Angeles in 1970(courtesy Village recorder studio). For the first time, a full collection of Morrison’s work has been released, and it is exhaustive in the sense that it provides readers an insight into the artist’s philosophy behind his creativity and allows them access to his thoughts and ideas.” In his remarkable performance in 1969, the poet criticized his generation for their lack of creativity and determination and their entrapment in the fixed doctrines dictated by the social establishment. According to the poet, individuals of his generation were unable to create their own reality and were enslaved by its fixed frameworks. There are several explanations for the frustration and nasty attitude shown by the poet towards his generation. Few critics believe that the counter-culture movement celebrated “peace” as an ideology, which might have led to the anger of the poet. Morrison as a poet always celebrated the Dionysian energy (emblem of chaos and destruction) to create reality. There was an obvious clash of both ideologies. Morrison was charged with an allegation of indulging in indecency during the infamous Miami concert of 1969. This collection comes with an extract of his trial journal entries, written during his 1970 Miami trial. These extracts provide the readers a glimpse into the psyche of the rock star and his inner conflict during that trial. Morrison spent the last phase of his life in the City of Lights, i.e., Paris. His fans are curious about that phase of his life. This anthology is enriched by the inclusion of the Paris notebook (his last writings) in a readable format, which has never been released before. Morrison’s love for film is not unknown. This anthology celebrates Morrison’s passion for films in the form of releasing his treatment of the screenplay and script of the unreleased film “Hitchhiker.” There are several colorful snaps of Jim Morrison’s family and moments from his eccentric performance, which provide the readers with a surreal and cinematic experience in viewing Morrison’s roots and career highlights. Morrison indeed lived a bohemian life, but his contribution to poetry and song-writing cannot be ignored. The seriousness and genius of his poetry cannot be undermined in the below instances. We shall discuss here six of our favorite Jim Morrison masterpieces (included in this book) among many to adhere to the word-limit.

 Opening of the Trunk– Morrison gifts us with this metamorphic critical piece where he brings out the struggle of the soul towards its salvation. Salvation of the soul is not easy. It’s like unlocking the lid of a locked box or trunk. The poet beautifully bridges spiritualism and literature in this poem.

                                                           “Let’s re-create the world

                                                        The palace of conception is burning

                                             Look. See it burn / Bask in the warm hot coals.”

The poet urges his readers to work on their intrapersonal skills. The poet encourages his readers to explore their inner selves. A person who does not know his/her inner identity or what he/she wants in life is unable to connect to any form of life, be it other human beings or the environment at large. Like an unlocked trunk, when we unlock ourselves from ‘Self-Ego’, we open ourselves to the universe. The soul is eternal and it is not confined to the physical body, time and space. By realizing “self”/true nature will lead us to connect with the oneness of the universe. This will lead us to unfetter the shackles of bondage and narrow confinement from the parochial cycle of life and death. The poet believed that personal freedom would only come with the rediscovering of the self. This self-realization would recreate the world in a new light, as the opening line of the poem states. Interestingly, the poet’s message is similar to Vedantic philosophy, though Morrison perhaps never read Vedanta. Vedantic philosophy believes that the discovery of self is the toughest. After that discovery, nothing is left to be discovered.

If Only I– Revisiting innocence and childhood is the dream of every individual. Tired of the complexities of modern life, the poet longs for the simple joys of life accompanied by the sights and sounds of nature. The stanzas take us down memory lane and make us nostalgic.

                                                          “If only I could feel,

                             The sound of the sparrows & feel child hood pulling me back again,

                                             If only I could feel me pulling back again &

                                      Feel embraced by reality again I would die, gladly die”

Stoned Immaculate– Morrison tried to imbibe several notions of Christianity, the Bible and the Afterlife in his poetry. Combining all these elements, he tried to address practical moral issues of daily life. One such example is Stoned Immaculate:

                                                     “Soft driven, slow and mad /

                                                        Like some new language

                           “Reaching your head with the cold, sudden fury of a divine messenger

                                      Let me tell you about heartache and the loss of God

                                                Wandering, wandering in hopeless night.”

The poet breaks the traditional concept of the afterlife as existing in Christian philosophy. It’s not the mere confession of sins but good “Karma” that transforms death into an ultimate truth or reward. The poet urges his readers to face the uncertainties of life fearlessly, and that, in turn, would equip them to face death bravely. The concept of death is viewed by the poet as an “eternal reward”.  The philosophical concept here is striking. Accepting the uncertainties of life would automatically lead to the acceptance of the uncertainties of the afterlife. Through these verses, Morrison encourages his readers to live life to the fullest instead of living a mere existence in the shadow of fear.

The Hitchhiker- Famously titled “Riders on the Storm”, experimenting with the fusion of conversational poetry and song. When converted into a song, it broke all records. This poem brings the reader face to face with his/her primal or fundamental instincts

                                                        “Riders on the Storm

                                                       Into this house we’re born

                                                    Into this world we are thrown”

. The poet has a unique style of presenting the uncertainties of life in the first stanza. What he means to say is that we have no control over our fate while being born. Our birth is controlled by fate or is not in our hands to decide. The poet has consciously used personification to personify human existence, as if trying to tame a storm.

Awake- This poem highlights Morrison’s tendency to choose ambiguity over traditional rhyme. Readers feel like they are experiencing a Post-Impressionist painting. The poem offers a striking surrealistic effect. The poem prioritizes the expression of desire.

                                                      “We laugh like soft mad children

                                             Smug in the woolly cotton brains of infancy

                                                 The music and voices are all around us.”

Power- Morrison highlights the simple act of trying to achieve something in his poem, “Power”:

                                                “I can make myself invisible or small

                                     I can become gigantic and reach the farthest things

                                                I can change the course of nature

                                       I can place myself anywhere in space or time.”

Going through these verses, the readers who had lost faith in life would rediscover their willpower. This poem celebrates the divinity of willpower. Lines from the poem empower readers with the belief that anything can be achieved in life at any point of time with the simple act of repeated trying in spite of failures. The philosophy of the above poem echoes the views of the legendary monk, Swami Vivekananda. Swami Vivekananda preached that one should keep on trying till he/she reaches the goal.

     Morrison, as a poet, always believed that poetry preaches and delights by opening possibilities for individuals. To neutralize the demons of his unstable soul, he indulged in enigmatic and innovative poetic ventures. Prochnicky, Riordan, and Sugerman severely criticized Morrison’s poetry, linking it to weed culture and pessimism. But these critics overlook the hidden message in Morrison’s poem and unduly link his lifestyle to his poetry. As discussed in most of the poems, like “Stoned Immaculate,” “If Only I,” and “Power,” readers would notice that when the poet spoke about empowerment, it had no connection with weed or drugs. Morrison has celebrated the infiniteness of human form (open and closed forms of existence) and the salvation of the soul and mind only through the wings of poetry or imagination. He preached his readers to indulge their imagination and realize their inner self, not to be dictated by a superficial reality that tries to influence the perceptions of people in terms of shaping their inner identity or self. But we need to keep in mind that Morrison believes in achieving the infiniteness of identity and reality only through imagination, by excluding it from the static framework of society and not by consuming drugs. Critics who don’t take Morrison as a serious poet might rethink their stand after going through the unpublished poems and lyrics included in this anthology. This book is for every Jim Morrison fan and others who want to explore him from a 360-degree view and not just as a rock-star. This review is just a short trailer of the immense literary feast that this book offers. In short, the book is priceless in terms of literary value. And congratulations to all thinking of opening this Pandora’s Box after reading this review. To conclude, we would like to bring to the reader’s attention a few lines from the epilogue of the book, enriched by the inclusion of Morrison’s unpublished “As I Look Back,” which is a poetic memoir of his life.

                                                          “As I look back

                                                            Over my life

                                          I am struck by post cards Ruined snap shots

                                               faded posters Of a time, I can’t recall

                                                     Before the beach, & birth,

                                             was the home for travelers juvenile pen

                                              a barracks in limbo of souls sans desire

                                                    They instill desire, day by day

                                                                   & night too

                                                                   Parachute birth

                                                                1st moments as war

                                                                  1st days of pain

                                                                  Struggle toward

                                                               I told stories & led

                                                           Treasure hunts for children

                                                                  I led bicycle packs

                                                              chasing girls home from

                                                                 school & delighted in

                                                                     spanking them

                                                                  I rebelled against church

                                                                       after phases of

                                                                              fervor

                                                                 I curried favor in school

                                                                   & attacked the teachers

                                                                          I was given a

                                                                       desk in the corner

                                                                             I was a fool

                                                                                   &

                                                                    The smartest kid in Class”

Acknowledgement

Special thanks to Dr. Shuchi, Assistant Professor, Department of Humanities and Social Sciences, National Institute of  Technology Mizoram, Chaltlang, Aizawl, Mizoram, India for gifting me this book.

References

Morrison, J., & Robbins, T. (2022) 2nd ed. The Collected Works of Jim Morrison: Poetry, Journals, Transcripts, and Lyrics. Harper Design.

Morrison, J. (1971). The Lords and the New Creatures (11th Paperback Edition). Simon & Schuster.

Morrison, J. (1990). Wilderness. The Lost Writings of Jim Morrison (New Ed). Penguin.

Morrison, J. (1991). The American Night: The Writings of Jim Morrison, Vol. 2 (First Vintage Books Edition). Vintage.

Roy, D., & Kaparwan, S. (2022). Decoding the Poetical Genius of American Poet Jim Morrison. Comparative Literature: East &Amp; West, 6(1), 83–104. https://doi.org/10.1080/25723618.2022.2082048.

Dwaipayan Roy (Corresponding Author) is a research scholar based in the department of Basic Science and Humanities Social sciences, National Institute of Technology, Mizoram India. He is actively engaged in research of American Literature & popular culture under supervision of Dr. Shuchi, Assistant Professor, Basic Science and Humanities & Social Sciences at the National Institute of Technology Mizoram (NIT Mizoram). He has a major in English literature followed by M.A in American Literature. Apart from this he also has a B.ED specializing in English language teaching under his belt. He is also actively involved in philanthropic activities with few NGOs. The author can be contacted at Email-id-brucewayne130@gmail.com

Effectiveness of the Reading Strategies Used by Engineering Students at the Undergraduate Level

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K. R. Surendran1 & Janaki Bojiah2

1Assistant Professor, Velammal College of Engineering & Technology. Email: krsd@vcet.ac.in

2Professor, Department of English, Velammal College of Engineering & Technology. Email: bj@vcet.ac.in

[Received 15 January 2023, modified 30 June 2023, accepted 2 July 2023, first published 22 July 2023]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.18
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Abstract

Communication skills consist of four primary skills namely listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills. This study tries to investigate the effectiveness of the reading strategies used by undergraduate technical students with diverse backgrounds at the intermediate level of learning English. A total of 371 Tamil-speaking Indian students of second-year and third-year of an engineering institute in South India participated in this study. They were provided with a list of questions that were five-point Likert scale closed-ended. The survey was conducted in the presence of the researchers for effective collection of data. To measure the reliability of the data collected, the Cronbach alpha test was conducted and the coefficients were derived. IBM SPSS and the data analysis tools of MS Excel were used for data analysis. The items presented in the questionnaire were divided into three sub-scales and the effectiveness of the same was interpreted. The results showed that the global understanding strategy is predominantly used by the participants followed by problem-solving strategy and supporting strategy. This lays the scope for the enhancement of the items clubbed under the problem-solving strategy and supporting strategy. The study also suggests training the instructors and the students to evaluate the effectiveness of their strategies and compare them with their peers’ strategies for better investigation and learning experience.

Keywords: reading strategies, global understanding strategy, problem-solving strategy, supporting strategy.

Book Review: Childscape, Mediascape: Children and Media in India

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Raman, Usha and Kasturi, Sumana, (Ed.) (2023). INR 1100 (Paper Back). Hyderabad: Orient BlackSwan. 349pp. ISBN: 9789354427305.

Reviewed by
Kanchan Biswas

Ph.D Research Scholar, Centre for the Study of Social Systems, School of Social Sciences, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Email id: kancha48_ssg@jnu.ac.in

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.17
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Numerous forms of electronic media are intricately woven into the fabric of a child’s existence nowadays with television, movies, videos, music, video games, and computers vital to both learning and play. The way youngsters react to interactive technology and instructional content supplied through it has an immediate and long-term impact on them. Corresponding to these benefits of media is an unfortunate reality that young children are more susceptible to the adverse effects of media usage, resulting in problems such as corpulence, aggressive behaviour, nervousness, and insomnia, among others, which have lately become an existential danger. 

Media scholars and advocates view children as a special interest group because they are seen as a vulnerable group whose rights must be protected as well as the future of the world, making their education and socialization of particular importance. Existing books, like Media And Children: Emerging Issues in Today’s World, have attempted to investigate the ubiquitous growth and reach of media in several domains relating to children. It also investigates how the media influences and shapes children’s minds, both favourably and catastrophically. The book aims to help youngsters understand and analyse the impact of media on them, and to help them become critical and informed viewers. It is also an attempt to examine how media literacy plays a part in educating parents and educators about the impact of media and determining what content is beneficial or bad for children. Similarly, The Handbook of Children, Media, and Development brings together a wide range of experts from developmental psychology, developmental science, communication, and medicine to provide a competent, thorough examination of the field’s empirical research on media and media policies.

However, in India, there has not been much critical research on children’s media habits despite there being global research on this subject. Until the 1980s, understanding children’s lived experiences of everyday life and their own viewpoints on various parts of society was not a focus of social scientific study. As a result, the ‘new’ social studies of childhood not only established conceptual frameworks for understanding children’s place in society but also engaged directly with children, utilising their own words and narratives to make sense of their experiences. This has prompted scholars to pay special attention to how children think and act in specific settings, as well as to grasp the concept of children’s agency. Unfortunately, studies on Indian children and their daily life have been scarce. Those that have recently been published are largely on schools and education, delinquency, cognitive development, or topics such as street children, child abuse, pedophilia or child labour. As vital as these areas are for understanding Indian society, the use, interpretation, and depiction of Indian children in media garner inadequate scrutiny. First among such endeavour is Shakuntala Banaji’s book, Children and Media in India: Narratives of Class, Agency and Social Change, extensive longitudinal fieldwork in India with children offers provides a rich and detailed account of the role of media in the lives of children from both the middle and working classes. Often, studies on childhood and media focus solely on class in terms of purchasing power and media availability. However, in her research, class intersects with caste, religion, and location to involve children’s intersectional identities.

Extensively citing Banaji, and building upon newer scopes of study, the volume editors Raman and Kasturi have brought together a range of viewpoints from media researchers, practitioners, and those involved in secondary school teaching with an emphasis on children and media, Childscape, Mediascape addresses this gap. This collection investigates a range of topics pertaining to children and the media environment while confronting the question of what it means to “grow up digital” in India in the twenty-first century. The edited volume by Raman and Kasturi contains twelve essays on important issues like, children’s use of new media and digital media literacy, mediated childhood and children’s rights, children as social media users and creators, digitality and education, children’s recreational and cultural activities, and issues of sense of self, representation, and individuals in a mediated world.

In the first chapter titled “Coming of Age” reviewing research on children and media in India, Pathak-Shelat extensively discussed the magnitude of literature in this particular domain. Her critical take from the north failed to acknowledge children belonging to intersectional identities bearing on caste, gender, class, religion and so forth. Most studies of the global north have largely focused on the class aspects which determine children’s engagement with media. She hopes for an ‘upward and onward’ (p.56) direction of research that would engage with a fresh examination of domains like ‘consent, vulnerability, adult-centricity’ (p.52).

In the second chapter titled “What’s the story here?”, Sarwatay focused on the transformative aspect of digital media. Drawing upon the discourse, she used the archival method and attempted to look into how youngsters interact with media. She analyses how children use media, what effects they have, and further, how the effects could be managed through policy and practice. Her findings focus on issues like cyber-bullying, stalking, media addiction, digital detox, helicopter parenting etc (p.71-6). She aims to encourage media literacy initiatives and address technopanics (p.64). She uses the concept of Mass self-consumption (p.63) to analyse and orient the discourse towards a ‘rights-based approach for children’s digital and social media lives’ (p.80).

The second section of the book consisting of three essays is premised around the idea of Representations, where the focus is to emphasize the need for inclusion and diversity. In chapter three titled “Transgressing ‘Innocense’” Sreenivas problematizes the idea of representation in popular children’s book publishers like Tara and Tulika. She argues that children’s narratives are routinely and decidedly middle-class privileged background in nature. She calls for the disruption of middle-class gaze and questions, what kind of mediation would be required to call for such disruption? She concludes her chapter by arguing “…children’s literature can look into biographies and other narratives emerging from Dalit and other marginalised groups for a productive and radical imagination of the field. This would not entail the abandonment of enjoyment, but perhaps new pleasures will emerge” (p.109).

In chapter four titled “Juxtapositions and Transformations”, Deshbandhu examines the manner in which media conducts children’s news narratives. Further pointing out that popular understanding places children as subjects that are vulnerable, fragile and without agency (p.26). To counter this popular claim, he draws upon children’s characters in video games where they are active and exhibit agency. However, he points out that such agency is only at the disposal of a particular class and such infrastructure does not challenge the status quo. He writes, “What is the rest of the children in the country challenges of class, caste and gender will continue to persist” (p.133)

In chapter five titled “Reflections and Re-presentations”, Siddiqui extends her description of Children in media, where they are co-opted to produce narratives that trigger politics. She argues that media portray systematic biases, where, children’s images are appropriated as passive symbols in war/conflict zone; at the same time, children are depicted as central actors in relief fundraising. She mentioned “even a cursory review of news in India will reveal a general repeated pattern of children being consistently underrepresented… however, news, media trials on sensationalist stories, particularly in todays ever competitive media sphere, and children often get co-opted within this” (p.147).

The next section of the book Interactions, consists of a set of three essays that explores Children’s engagement with old and new media.  Children’s involvement with media has traditionally been viewed as one-directional, with children functioning as passive recipients of signals that may shape them into ideal individuals or have negative consequences. However, this section breaks away from such cliched understanding, and provides fresh evidence on media interactions. The following chapters in this section use evidence-based approach (empirical) and suggest ‘media literacy’ to make interactions healthy and meaningful (p.29).

In chapter six titled “To be or not to be …with technology”, Mukunda offers its readers an insight into the debates and policy decisions around smartphones in the school curriculum, using Focus group discussion among senior students in schools. While some people believe that children should be protected from modern forms of media such as television and the Internet, others recognise that what is important is interaction that allows children to explore their engagement with media entities.    Upon analysing the pros the cons of technology in education, Mukunda suggests that banning technology would not keep harm at bay, rather healthier means of using devices could be a possible solution. He flagged concerns regarding the addictive nature of smartphone use and also the reasons for most smartphone policy in schools. He concludes by pointing out “so quiet observation and open dialogue, we can together learn how to be aware of certain movements in ourselves that make us vulnerable to emotional Ill-being. Such awareness is perhaps the best way to prepare for the future life of digital immersion” (p.180).

In Chapter seven titled “Everyday use of digital technologies by adolescent girls”, Parihar uses action research approach and focused group discussion, to promote discussions around cyberbullying and risky behaviour among adolescents online. She suggests that adolescents are more aware of such instances than anticipated, thus their outlook and opinions must be incorporated in developing policies. She elaborately discussed the Indian scenario of changing media context, becoming and being digital, which also entails malicious communication, perceptions, practices and peers as perceived by adolescent girls. She concludes, “we must make the youth more alert and discerning about dedicatedly and damaging media content and to raise public awareness about media among teenagers their parents and other adults in their milieu… event, specially organised and undertaken by all the stakeholders. We can support democratic and just societies (pp. 206-7).

In chapter eight titled “Adolescents and social media”, Kumari used in-depth interviews among a study cohort of children of 13-17 years of age in urban and peri-urban surroundings to understand their issues of accessibility, expectations and control from new media. So out she questions, ‘whether the use of social media by adolescents can be characterised as a traction addiction impression or necessity?’ (p. 209). Her finding yes, that social media discs include cyberbullying, online harassment, sex, sting depression, social comparison and privacy concerns (p.215). Further, she contends “since social media has spread rapidly with little regulation, self-regulation appears to be one of the ways for users to protect themselves from its possible harms…” (ibid.). She noticed in her study that the perception of social media among the urban youth and the rural youth differed considerably in terms of objective, apprehension and attitude.

The next section of the book titled “Constructions” consists of two chapters where the scholars have described content-making processes among children using media. Through their ethnography and participatory approaches, they analysed the changing world of media which also had an impact on how the arts are consumed and practised. There is an increased recognition for creative work. In the past, children used to be told to put away their painting instruments and focus on “studies,” today parental figures frequently serve as patrons who post their children’s artistic strives on social media, hoping for encouragement and validation.

In chapter nine titled “Kids make art”, Mishra points out the importance of creative art in the lives of children, such that they can meaningfully create content. Such an enterprise would make them creative, resilient and promote empathy. This is also linked to the drive for self-promotion that characterises the contemporary work environment, which requires the individual to continuously demonstrate herself as a valuable professional.  The onus is increasingly on the person to illustrate the worth of her work rather than the frameworks of the artistic sector, and social networking operates as a medium to do so. His concluding remarks point out that “so many of the young people display, fragile, inner resources. Often, they come to creative practice because they have not been able to find a way to express themselves elsewhere… clearly children not taking on the role of creative practitioners. In a variety of ways. They are finding their own way to some of these strengths” (pp. 253-4)

In Chapter ten titled “Redefining the political by visual narratives of Sangwadi Khabaria in central India”, Belavadi recounts instances from Sangwari khabariya community, where media literacy among children of underprivileged backgrounds has been beneficial in developing agency, projecting marginal voices and most importantly, helped them making critical political observations.   He described how the students chosen for the project were originally apprehensive to participate because the majority of them had not been exposed to the world outside their village. The first challenge was convincing them to trust our organisation and how it worked.  Peer learning, as well as vernacular vocabulary, were employed to instruct students in video editing. By the end of the programme, all of the youngsters could edit videos on their own, though not with professional finesse. These videos were streamed in community gatherings, intended to inform people about their rights and privileges. He argues that, in order to build a paradigm for financial sustainability, alternative or community media must be embedded in political and democratic interactions (pp.265-8).

The final section of the book, “Negotiations” offers insights from margins, where media acts as an escape route as well as survival strategy among young people belonging to the margins of society. In chapter eleven titled “Romance in the times of Facebook”, Rangaswamy used face-to-face in-depth interviews with 31 teenagers, adopting participative, observational and formal methods of study to reflect upon their Facebook usage in everyday life in urban slums of Chennai and Hyderabad. She explored online social relationships and digital etiquettes, where youngsters learn through trial and error. The idea of the digital self and its allied practices are empowering for teens. She noted, “multimedia-rich, interactive interfaces like Facebook timelines, seem to provide a part of self-empowerment through reciprocal acknowledgement, admiration, and even self-expressions of passionate fandom” (p.284). Her findings imply that the availability of unfiltered digital products among adolescents and teens helps in articulating, a sensation of being lesser-marginalised, particularly in the use of digital media. She also stated that an excess of digital self-profiling on Facebook resulted in a surplus-self, which is a combination of both beneficial and detrimental interactions encountered by users on the margins of digital society. While she further questions, the academic audience that, “rather than technology, injecting, social norms and behaviours into users. This study exemplifies how young people can knead technologies to support social norms. Even social norms are usually thought of as deeply embedded in social systems where technology is least expected to bring dramatic sometimes impactful change” (p.295).

In chapter twelve, titled “Religious Socialization of Children”, Bhatia’s essay criticises how the media promotes religion as the main reason for regulating children’s activities and behaviours. Her findings imply that media has the capacity to plunge youngsters into religious fantasies by determining the ways in which they speak, act, and behave in connection to the religious self and the other. In her ethnographic research on Hindu and Muslim young children in Gujarat, she demonstrates how media discourse includes representational tactics and promotes the normalised code of behaviour in religious communities, resulting in the appearance of microaggression (p.317).  She concluded by expressing hope that the goal of unlearning religious biases will necessitate research by scholars and educators in order to conceptualise projects in critical media literacy (p.323-4).

These detailed engaging empirical and theoretical chapters in this volume suggest that the creative arts and media landscapes are inextricably linked. In this surrounding environment, children, particularly urban children, begin acquiring media skills at a young age, outside of mandatory education. Children today have an inherent comprehension of the language of imagery. This is apparent in how kids utilise social media sites such as Instagram and Snapchat, combining image and text to create narratives from their day-to-day. This book will be valuable to academia in media and communication studies, cultural studies, and research, in addition to the field of psychology and broadcasting readership.  The chapters give crucial information for parents, teacher training programmes, child-oriented NGOs, and other parties involved in children’s issues. The book is a thorough synthesis of several theoretical traditions and research practices, and it is one of the few publications on the subject that covers both critical and empirical approaches to the topic. It combines developmental psychology, cultural studies, childhood sociology, and health studies, among other disciplines, to provide knowledge of the roles media play in the changing nature of childhood in India.

Reflection of Saudi Women’s Participation and Leadership: A Study on the Gender Differences in Leadership and Structural Barriers

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420 views

Musrrat Parveen
Associate Professor, Faculty of Economics and Administration, Department of Human Resource Management, King Abdulaziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Email mpmohammed@kau.edu.sa

[Received 18 March 2023, modified 25 June 2023, accepted 27 June 2023, first published 18 July 2023′]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.16
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Abstract

This article examines gender disparities and structural barriers in the Saudi Arabian workforce from 2000 to 2022. It proposes measures to promote women’s participation and leadership. Multiple databases, including Emerald, IEEE Explore, Science Direct, PubMed, Google Scholar, and Web of Science, were searched using generic terms. Additionally, official Saudi government reports, magazines, newspapers, books, and journals were used as secondary data sources. Torraco’s method analyzed 10 studies on gender gap and gender differences (2011-2023), 16 studies on structural barriers (2000-2012), and 30 studies (2013-2022). The study highlights critical areas of disparities and barriers, including the need for legal and policy reforms, increasing women’s visibility in the economic sector, transforming attitudes towards women’s leadership and participation, addressing time and mobility constraints, reducing wealth and power inequalities, inspiring and supporting women in leadership roles, and providing assistance for the transmission of leadership roles that recognize and promote women’s rights. The findings divulged various implementations and Strategies to overcome the gender gap, gender differences in leadership, and structural barrier to women’s participation by Saudi government. The research emphasizes the importance of policy reform to foster gender equality in the Saudi Arabian workplace. Reforms outlined in the “Saudi Vision 2030” have made significant progress. Policymakers can utilize this study’s findings to promote women’s participation and leadership in the Saudi workforce.

Keywords: Strategies & policies, Structural barriers, Gender differences, Gender gap, Saudi Women Studies

Sustainable Development Goals: Gender Equality

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Volume 14, Number 1, 2022
Themed Issue on
Contemporary East and Southeast Asian Literary and Cultural Studies
Eds: Dr Jeremy de Chavez & Dr Zhang Yue
University of Macau, China

Cover image courtesy: Zhang Xiuchen, China. “Ink Bamboo”. 5 October 2021.

Editorial Introduction: East Asia 
Experiencing and Writing East Asian (Post)modernity
Yue Zhang
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.00. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
The Poetics of Fei Ming: How the Classical Merged with the Modernist
Candy Fan Wang 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.02. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Precarity and Performativity in Post-Fordist Japanese Workplace: A Reading of Sayaka Murata’s Convenience Store Woman
Jaseel P & Rashmi Gaur 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.03. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Foreignized Translation of Onomatopoeia in The Last Lover
Minhui Xu & Tingting Chen 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.04. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Translingual, Transcultural, and Transboundary Sceneries: Aesthetic Ideas and Discursive Practice in Yu Dafu’s Landscape Writing
Yidan Wang 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.05. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Introduction to Antiquarian Chinese Book Collections in Contemporary Macao
 Chon Chit TANG 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.06. First published: February 05, 2022.
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Editorial Introduction: Southeast Asia 
Rethinking, Narrating, Consuming Modern and Contemporary Southeast Asia
 Jeremy De Chavez
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.01. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Bagay: Articulating a New Materialism from the Philippine Tropics
Christian Jil R. Benitez 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.07. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Traversing Paths/Pasts: Places of Filipino Philosophy
 Hazel T. Biana
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.08. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Which tongue? The Imported Colonial Standard or Motherland Vernacular? Exploring “Death” as the Birth of Postcolonial Malaysia in Muthammal Palanisamy’s Funeral Chant
Kavitha Ganesan 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.09. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Revisiting theatre of the minoritarian in neoliberalism: The Embodied Memories in Denise Uyehara’s and Dan Kwong’s Auto-performances
 Io Chun KONG 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.10. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Autopoetics, Market Competence, and the Transnational Author
Maria Gabriela P. Martin 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.11. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Women Trespassing Borders: Imaginaries of Cosmopolitanism from Below in Mia Alvar’s In the Country
 Carlos M. Piocos III 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.12. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
The Teleserye Story: Three Periods of the Evolution of the Filipino TV Soap Opera
 Louie Jon A. Sanchez 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.13. First published: February 05, 2022.
Abstract Full-Text PDF

RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Skinned Performance: Female Body Horror in Joko Anwar’s Impetigore
Anton Sutandio
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.14. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Apostol’s Creed: Unveiling the Political Fictions of Colonialism and Nation in the Diasporic Novel
Marikit Tara Alto Uychoco 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.15. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
From Private Eye to Public “I”: The Chinese Filipinos in Charlson Ong’s Hard-Boiled Fiction
Joseph Ching Velasco
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.16. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
Pop Song Translations by Rolando Tinio as Script and Subversion of the Marcos Regime
Niccolo Rocamora Vitug 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.17. First published: February 05, 2022.
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RESEARCH ARTICLE OPEN ACCESS
English in the Philippines from the Perspective of Linguistic Imperialism
Jie Zeng & Tian Yang
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.18. First published: February 05, 2022.
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BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Affect, Narratives and Politics of Southeast Asian Migration by Carlos M. Piocos III
Jose Kervin Cesar B. Calabias 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.19. First published: February 05, 2022.
Abstract Full-Text PDF

BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Translating China as Cross-Identity Performance by James St. Andre
 Cao Qilin 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.20. First published: February 05, 2022.
Abstract Full-Text PDF

BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Feminist Translation Studies: Local and Transnational Perspectives edited by Olga Castro and Emek Ergun
John Chi Chon FONG 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.21. First published: February 05, 2022.
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BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Translingual Words: An East Asian Lexical Encounter with English by Jieun Kiaer
 Yi Xuan Jia 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.22. First published: February 05, 2022.
Abstract Full-Text PDF

BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Chinese American Literature without Borders: Gender, Genre, and Form by King-Kok Cheung
 Windy Xiao Xue 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.23. First published: February 05, 2022.
Abstract Full-Text PDF

BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Digital Humanities: Knowledge and Critique in a Digital Age by David M. Berry and Anders Fagerjord
 Xi Li & Jie Zeng 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.24. First published: February 05, 2022.
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BOOK REVIEW OPEN ACCESS
Twenty-First-Century Children’s Gothic: from the Wanderer to Nomadic Subject by Chloe Germaine Buckley
Zhao Yifan 
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v14n1.25. First published: February 05, 2022.
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Logic as a Tool for Developing Critical Thinking

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Lukas Vartiak1, Galina Jaseckova2, Milan Konvit3

1Comenius University, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, Institute of Mediamatics, Bratislava, Slovakia. ORCID: 0000-0002-9735-5945. Email: lukas.vartiak@fses.uniba.sk

2Comenius University, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, Institute of Mediamatics, Bratislava, Slovakia. ORCID: 0000-0002-3699-8082. Email: galina.jaseckova@fses.uniba.sk

3Comenius University, Faculty of Social and Economic Sciences, Institute of Mediamatics, Bratislava, Slovakia. ORCID: 0000-0002-4959-7819. Email: milan.konvit@fses.uniba.sk

[Received 25 May 20023, modified 26 June 2023, accepted 28 June 2023, first published 30 June 2023]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, June 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.15
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Abstract

A characteristic feature of modern society is the ever-expanding information space. Hidden information attacks harm the lives of individuals and society in general. In this regard, studies of critical thinking seem particularly important to us. Therefore, critical thinking is interpreted in the academic discourse mainly in connection with the effort to cope with the growing amount of misinformation and hate speech. While teachers and policymakers consider critical thinking an important educational goal, many are unclear about developing this competency in a school setting. For many key competencies, the question is whether and how they can be acquired through planned educational courses/programs. Although there are specific training programs for critical thinking as a core competency, their design and effectiveness are scientifically controversial. Instruction in critical thinking becomes extremely important because it allows individuals to gain a more comprehensive understanding of the information they encounter and promotes good decision-making and problem-solving in real-world applications. Despite the ambiguity of the term critical thinking, its close connection with logical culture is evident. Logical culture is the culture of thinking manifested in the culture of written and oral speech. The starting point for developing critical thinking skills should be logic. Logic as a science of correct thinking is the basis on which the program for developing critical thinking is based. The paper’s main aim is to identify the status of critical thinking as an independent discipline. A partial aim of the paper is to define the relationship between critical thinking and logic. The paper is divided into six parts, while the main findings are summarised in conclusions. In its purest form, logic does not teach how to work with a changing context or apply it to the subject realities of various disciplines, but such characteristics as precision, clarity, provability, and persuasiveness are key for this science. It is through logic that the basic principles of thinking, which we call critical, are revealed, the rules of argumentation and definitions are explained, and misconceptions and errors are displayed. Logic is distinguished from other sciences by the fundamentality of the discussed problems. Logic is the only science that combines mathematics, computer science and humanities education. We believe that modern logic is only the beginning of the first of the sciences of a new generation, which will be invited to combine the analyticity of the scientific method with the synthetics of perception of the humanitarian point of view. Therefore, we believe that the development of critical thinking skills appears to be productive in combination with the study of logic and is a priority in the modern educational process. It is difficult to imagine the formation of critical thinking in isolation from the building of the logical culture of the individual, which gives him a solid foundation for understanding the essence of critical thinking.

Keywords: Logic, Informal logic, Critical thinking, Cognitive theories, Teaching Logic, Competencies.

Retrieval of Identity Layers in Persian Illustrated Lithographed Manuscripts with Religious Themes of the Qajar Era

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Mahmonir Shirazi1 & Maryam Hoseini2

1Postdoctoral Researcher, Lecturer at Alzahra University. ORCID ID: 0000-0002-4175-4912. Email: m.shirazi@alzahra.ac.ir

2Professor at Alzahra University, Department of Persian Literature, ORCID ID: 0000-0001-6778-1188. Email: drhoseini@alzahra.ac.ir

[Received 05 May 20023, modified 20 June 2023, accepted 22 June 2023, first published 24 June 2023]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, June 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.14
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Abstract:

This paper aims to scrutinize the identity layers in artworks of the Qajar era. Identity in art has different layers and each layer depends on different aspects. the Qajar Era is one of the culturally productive periods in Iran. It also had widespread relations with the West in different matters. Thus several identity layers in the culture and artworks can be seen in this period. The research tries to answer this question: what are the identity layers and their priorities found in the Lithographed Manuscripts with religious themes in the Qajar Era? The analysis of 10 manuscripts with various dates shows that there are four identity layers: archaism, Persian-Islamic, Western-style and Islamic-Shi? tendency in artworks of the Qajar Era and each type of artwork, some layers have more importance.

Keywords: Identity layers, Lithography, Art of the Qajar, religious Manuscript, Illustration

The Dialectics of the Performance of the Kecak Ramayana in Uluwatu, Bali, Indonesia

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Robby Hidajat1, Utami Widiati2, E.W. Suprihatin D.P3, Guntur4 & Surasak Jamnongsarn5
1-3Department of Art and Design, Faculty of Letters, Universitas Negeri Malang. Email: robby.hidajat.fs@um.ac.id
4Department of Craft, Faculty of Fine Arts and Design, Indonesian Institute of the Arts, Surakarta
5Department of Traditional Thai and Asian Music, Faculty of Fine Arts, Srinakharinwirot University

[Submitted 05 May 20023, modified 20 June 2023, accepted 22 June 2023, first published 24 June 2023]

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, June 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.13
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Theoretical
The Ramayana kecak is a popular tourist art in Bali that is rich in symbolism. The audience watches only from the front of the stage, which is formalistic in nature, witnessing different scenes, characteristics of figures, structures, and dramatic factors. The performers are not aware that the backstage is the realm of rituals and a part of the deep experience of spiritual beliefs. The front stage and backstage should be viewed as complementary duality. Activities behind the stage are more natural while those on the front stage are a manipulation. The backstage can be understood as a dramaturgical richness of a paradoxical and symbolic Eastern performing art. Therefore, the appeal of the backstage is not an attractive consideration. This research uses a qualitative descriptive approach. The data were collected through in-depth interviews with Ramayana kecak artists at Uluwatu Temple, Bali, and a document analysis was done. The theories used are symbolic interpretation, text and context, and symbolic structure. The results of the research present a description of the dramaturgy of Balinese performing art with a specific focus on: 1. Dramaturgy of the front stage, 2. Dramaturgy of the backstage, and 3. Local spiritual aesthetics including the spirit of duality known as taksu which is rooted in Rwa Bhineda.

Keywords: Kecak Ramayana, dramaturgy, performing art, Uluwatu Temple.

Ballet in Virtual Reality: On the Problem of Synthesizing “End-to-End” Technologies and Theatrical Stage Art

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302 views

Tatiana V. Portnova
The Kosygin State University of Russia, Moscow, Russian Federation. Email: portnova_ta@bk.ru

Submitted 10 January 2022, modified 27 May 2023, accepted 17 June 2023, first published 21 June 2023

Rupkatha Journal, Vol. 15, Issue 2, June 2023. https://doi.org/10.21659/rupkatha.v15n2.12
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Abstract

The article is devoted to the study of the problem of synthesizing “end-to-end” technologies and theatrical (stage) art. The author proceeds from the fact that in the era of industrialization, a person’s perceptual practices are carried out through the prism of a new, generative reality, which, consequently, causes the transformation of the spatial-temporal model of aesthetic experience. However, the artist as the creator of a work of art, having a special sensitivity to reality, can see what may be inaccessible to his audience. The hypothesis is put forward that this ability is based on a simultaneous perception of time and space, the fundamentalization of which in the perceptual practice and aesthetic experience of the viewer is the main task of a modern artist. The verification of this hypothesis was carried out through the prism of the synthesis of virtual reality as an “end-to-end” digital technology and stage (choreographic) art, where time and space become the subject of artistic reflection. The methodological foundation of the research is based on a discursive analysis, which allows us to understand, firstly, how modern stage (choreographic) digital art offers the viewer to make a path on his own, with a “previously passed meaning” and with the help of his already existing perceptual experience; secondly, how the artist, as the creator of a work of digital art, builds and carries out a “conversation” with the viewer through the prism of the simultaneous communicative space initiated by him. The author emphasizes that a modern artist, regardless of his/her role in art, must have the skill of discursive analysis to be able to create a communicative space in which the viewer will be able to gain perceptual experience and independently “realize” the temporal-spatial mega-code, and understand the idea of the artist, regardless of how much it is hidden from the audience. In turn, the ability to discursive analysis of the viewer will allow you to collect and disperse meanings, transform them, return them to their original state and let them go back into the element of the game of signifiers, offering yourself to overcome the path in the semantic landscape of the work of theatrical (stage, choreographic) art.

Keywords: “end-to-end” technologies, theatrical art, choreographic art, virtual reality, perceptual practice, ballet, space, time.

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