Joanne Scott
Investigador Colaborador, Investigador
Biografia
Dr Jo Scott (she/her) is an artist-researcher and educator, based in central Portugal. Jo’s research is conducted through a variety of creative practices including performance, installation, sound walks and sonic experiences. She holds a practice-based PhD in intermedial performance-making and has worked on more than 20 artistic research projects. Jo’s current research is exploring the use of sited sonic practices such as sound walks, instructional works and sonic scores to explore human relationships with changing, disturbed and damaged landscapes. This research is particularly interested in the relationships we form with the more than human world, the value we place on our companion species and how creative digital practices can reveal our close entanglements with these species. Jo has taught in UK Higher Education for the past 12 years and is a scholar of digital performance, a field in which she has published widely. She is also an expert in artistic and practice research, has supervised and examined a number of practice research doctoral projects and has been invited to speak about practice research to researchers at a range of institutions. She is the associate editor of the International Journal of Performing Arts and Digital Media and is currently co-editing a new collection about extended reality (XR) performance, due out in 2025.
Extra
Temas e problemáticas da atividade científica
Ecological arts practices: sound art, sound walks, sited sound works
Digital performance, creative technologies, intermedial practices
Multispecies studies, human relationships with ecologies/landscapes/other than humans
Publicações mais relevantes no período de 2018-2023
Scott, J. (2024). ‘Interstitial City Woodlands: encounters with enfolded debris in urban wildscapes.’ in M. Taub. (ed.) Forests and Fences. Routledge. 10.4324/9781003482642-5 [a) editora internacional; b) com arbitragem científica; c) acesso fechado; d) publicado]
Scott, J. (2022). "A datalogical reading of online performance". International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media: https://doi.org/10.1080/14794713.2021.2018222 [a) editora internacional; b) com arbitragem científica; c) acesso aberto; d) publicado]
Scott, J. (2021). ‘Postdigital Place-Mixing in the Wild City’, in Jarvis, L. and Savage, K. (eds.) Avatars, Activism and Postdigital Performance: Precarious Intermedial Identities. Methuen. [a) editora internacional; b) com arbitragem científica; c) acesso fechado; d) publicado]
Scott, J. (2020). 'Rich Kids: A History of Shopping Malls in Tehran’ and 'The Believers Are but Brothers' - digital lack and excess in a postdigital age. International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 16(2), 134–149. https://doi.org/10.1080/14794713.2020.1761680 [a) editora internacional; b) com arbitragem científica; c) acesso fechado; d) publicado]
Scott, J. (2018). ‘Virtual: Performance and Digital’, in Bryon, E. (ed.) Performing Interdisciplinarity: Working Across Disciplinary Boundaries through an Active Aesthetic. Oxon/New York: Routledge. [a) editora internacional; b) com arbitragem científica; c) acesso aberto; d) publicado
Participação em projetos financiados no período de 2018-2023
Walking in the Wild Smart City, Joanne Scott, University of Salford, UK, UKRI Participatory Research Fund: January-September 2022. https://sway.cloud.microsoft/NmRsPJY33PTXlMVM?ref=Lin
Orientação de estudantes de pós-graduação no período de 2018-2023
Dr Manoli Moriaty (2019) ‘Symbiotic Synergies: adaptive framework for polydisciplinary collaboration in performance practice’. Internally funded PhD Project. Primary supervisor, University of Salford
Dr Pavel Prokopic (2019) ‘Affective Cinema: between style, chance and the moving body’ – AHRC funded PhD Project. Primary supervisor, University of Salford
Dr Lucie Sykes (2024), ‘Embodied Dance Improvisatory Approaches: Exploring the sculptural quality of the improvising body with digital environments’. Internally funded PhD Project. Joint Primary Supervision, University of Salford
Dr Haleemah X (2024), ‘Corridors: An exploration of Muslim female identity and representation through rap and visual album’. Internally funded PhD Project. Primary Supervisor, University of Salford
Dr Natasha Stott (2025), ‘An exploration of the conversation between the moving body and projected image, through improvisation’. PhD Project. Primary Supervisor, University of Salford