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English and Drama

Dr Swati Arora, BA, MA, PhD, FHEA

Swati

Senior Lecturer in Performance and Global South Studies

Email: swati.arora@qmul.ac.uk
Office Hours: See QMplus

Profile

My work engages with the intersections of performance and visual culture, feminist theory, Black Studies, and dramaturgies of urban space in the global South. Across my research, writing and pedagogy, I am concerned with how different forms of performance and artistic production challenge colonial and imperial histories, epistemologies, and their corresponding debris.

I have held Mellon Fellowships at the Centre for Humanities Research and the Women’s and Gender Studies Department, UWC, South Africa. I was awarded the Early Career Research Prize by Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA) in 2024 and was shortlisted for the same in the QMUL Research and Innovation Awards.

Prior to joining Queen Mary, I worked at King’s College London. I co-convened the Performance in Public Spaces working group of the International Federation for Theatre Research (2019-21 and 2011-13) and was part of the TaPRA executive committee for 2022-24.

Teaching

I tend to teach on the following modules:

  • Power Plays
  • Culture, Power, Performance
  • Performance and Visual Culture in South Asia
  • Culture, Performance, Globalisation
  • Performance, Activism, Social Justice

 

Research

Research Interests:

  • Minoritarian performance and cultural production
  • Feminist theory
  • Postcolonial urbanisms
  • South Asian studies

Recent and On-Going Research

My ongoing research looks at the relationship between urban art and performance practices and public spaces in postcolonial Delhi. It explores how these aesthetic practices respond to the densely entangled processes of urbanisation, ecological crises, and sociopolitical environment, while navigating the dynamics of class, caste, gender, sexuality, and religiosity.

With colleagues at the Women’s and Gender Studies Department, UWC, South Africa, I am part of interdisciplinary projects on hydrofeminism and pedagogies of refusal. Some of this work has been published as an essay on ‘Performing Refusal’ in Injury and Intimacy (Manchester: MUP, 2022; Delhi: Zubaan, 2023; Cape Town: Karavan, 2023) and as ‘A manifesto to decentre theatre and performance studies’ (STP, 2021).

I co-edited Pluriversal Conversations on Transnational Feminisms: And Words Collide from a Place (2023) with Nina Lykke, Redi Koobak, Petra Bakos, and Kharnita Mohamed. The central focus of the book is methodological―it explores how an engagement with transnational, intersectional, and decolonial feminisms can stimulate epistemological and disciplinary border-crossings. The conversation is pluriversal―it voices and reflects upon a plurality of geopolitical as well as epistemic locations in specific Global South/East/North/West contexts. Supported by the Swedish Foundation for International Cooperation in Research and Higher Education (STINT), this volume is the result of a collaboration with Linköping University, University of Bergen, Central European University, and the University of the Western Cape.

My research has been supported by the Mellon Foundation; UK-India Education and Research Initiative; European Commission’s Erasmus Mundus funding; German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD); Research England’s Enhancing Research and Innovation Fund; and Queen Mary Institute of Humanities and Social Sciences.

Publications

Selected writing:

Supervision

I welcome enquiries from potential doctoral students interested in any areas of my research, particularly from communities that are under-represented in academia.

Current students:

  • Prerana Kumar, ‘Ritual Fracture: Dismantling Patriarchal Hierarchies through Queer, Anti-caste, Ecofeminist Ritual Poetics’ — with Nisha Ramayya and Rehana Ahmed (LAHP funding).
  • Jordan/Martin Hell, ‘Black Deviations, Archival Speculations: Black Feminist Practice-led Research in 20th Century Literature and Performance’ — with Nisha Ramayya (QMPS funding).
  • Tobi Poster-Su, ‘Towards a Critical Puppetry: Racialisation and Material Performance’ — with Nicholas Ridout and Martin O’Brien (LAHP funding).
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