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Full Description
Stigma is the social process at the heart of discrimination and social abjection. In Sticking Stigma, Dani Snyder-Young examines the cultural technologies of power artists and cultural producers employ to manipulate stigma and its resulting affects in performance projects oriented toward the alleviation of social inequalities. This includes performances explicitly and implicitly working to reduce stigma experienced by marginalized communities as well as performances working to stigmatize behaviors aligned with facets of oppressive hegemonic power.
Applied theater projects have been used to reduce the stigma related to many health conditions including bipolar disorder, HIV, suicide bereavement, mental illness, autism, and substance use disorder. Beyond this applied theater tradition, theater and performance studies tend not to use the framework or language of stigma very often. Stigma is a more commonly used framework in social science fields such as health and sociology. However, theater and performance regularly attends to the material and affective violence of stigma power: oppression, dispossession, abjection, objectification, expulsion. Snyder-Young examines a set of activist performance projects attempting to use the force of stigma to redistribute and recenter social power.
Contents
Introduction: Manipulating Stigma
Part 1: Reducing Stigma
Chapter 1: Reducing Internalized Stigma: Embodied Worldmaking and Participatory Storytelling
Chapter 2: Instrumentalizing Utopian Performativity: Spectatorial Affective Contact and Stigma Reduction
Chapter 3: Aesthetic Distance and Absent Contact: Little Amal Amidst a 'Migrant Crisis'
Part 2: Stigmatizing for Social Justice
Chapter 4: Killjoy Hegemony and Counterpublic Stigma Power: Public Accountability, Networked Harassment, and Stigmatainment
Chapter 5: Stigmatizing Performative Activism
Chapter 6: White Women's Tears: Stigmatizing White Supremacy Culture through Critical Bouffon
Methodological Appendices
Appendix A: Interview and Survey Study of Recovery Storytelling Participants
Appendix B: Audience Survey for This Is Treatment
Appendix C: This is Treatment Survey Participant Demographics



