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This chapter takes as a foundation that relations and understandings between people, particularly those from different social spheres, matter. Through dual lenses of critical cosmopolitanism- which posits the need for encounters based on openness, equity and caring, and transmodalities- which postulates five complexities of ‘trans’-era communications, we analyse digitally-mediated communications among groups of youth from disparate under-resourced communities as they create, share and discuss digital stories on a dedicated website. In particular, we explore exchanges between youth from a rural Ugandan village and those from a large Indian slum as they compose videos and messages intended to highlight their resourcefulness and innovation: through the entanglement of languaging, resources, materiality, culture, place and ideologies, each group mis/interprets and positions the other through a lens of ‘deficiency’. While translanguaging attends to flexibility and fluidity of language-in-use, transmodalities attends to semiotic processes through which people make sense of themselves, one another and the world. A transmodal analysis of videos, chats, interviews and group meetings recasts ‘disparity’ and ‘peripherality’, as, through transnational engagements, youths’ emergent understandings of global others’ lives and their own, and of relationships being forged, transcend labels to illuminate emic perspectives, challenging (and sometimes reifying) these constructs.
The Introduction begins with a vignette illustrating the productive tension between a festival’s stated goals and the cultural work performed by its constituent parts. It introduces the book's main problematic: the ways and degrees to which international theatre and multi-arts festivals stage, represent, exchange, market, and negotiate cultural difference, broadly understood to include ethnic, national, Indigenous, queer, disability, and other cultures. It proceeds to outline the book’s major definitional fields (festivals and interculturalism) and scholarly debates around the key characteristics of festivals (their liminality, transformational qualities, and cosmopolitan aspirations). It then outlines the contexts (festivalization, eventification, creative city theory, globalized neoliberalism) within which festivals operate, the scope, methods, and theoretical frames within which the book operates, and the chapter breakdown and festival taxonomy that gives the book its shape.
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