Articles tagged with: circus and its others

  • Innovative research reimagines contemporary circus studies

    A Brock-supported initiative, Circus and its Others (CaiO), recently held a conference in Bogotá, Colombia. The conference featured a multimodal program of events that convened more than 70 scholars and showcased a circus festival featuring more than 100 artists. The Volodores de Papantla, pictured here, performed the Ceremonia ritual de los Guagas in the plaza of the Centro Cultural Gabriel García Márquez as part of the Achura Karpa festival programming. Photo credit: Nicolás Mahecha.

    published in the Brock News | Wednesday, January 21, 2026 | by 

    A multi-year initiative is uniting artists, academics and audiences from across the globe to celebrate the diversity of contemporary circus.

    Circus and its Others (CaiO), co-founded by Brock University Dramatic Arts Adjunct Professor Karen Fricker and Professor Charles Batson of Union College in New York, began in 2016 as a conference exploring representations of difference in circus.

    Since its debut in Montreal, CaiO has gained momentum and a significant following of international circus artists and academics who are expanding the boundaries of circus studies.

    “What started as a conversation between North America-based colleagues has blossomed into a truly global inquiry,” said Fricker. “And the more we’ve broadened our perspectives to include traditions and cultures from the Global South, the richer the work has become.”

    Participants in the project come from a wide array of disciplinary backgrounds, including theatre and performance studies, anthropology, sociology, history, queer and gender studies, kinesiology, cultural studies. Their explorations of otherness and difference include studies of circus performances, labour and mobility practices, education and training, and colonial and post-colonial histories, among other topics.

    The final presentation of an Indigenous circus workshop as part of the Achura Karpa festival brought together a number of Indigenous circus companies and artists, including the Artcirq Inuit Performance Collective and the Volodores de Papantla, during the CaiO Bogotá conference. Photo credit: Nicolás Mahecha.

    “At its roots, CaiO has become a diverse global community made up of people coming together to share their identities, culture, art and scholarship with each other; the deep sense of shared purpose is profound,” Fricker said.

    The most recent CaiO conference was held in March 2024 in Bogotá, Colombia. A multimodal program of events convened more than 70 scholars and showcased a circus festival featuring more than 100 artists.

    An editorial committee including Fricker, Batson and colleagues Julieta Infantino (Argentina), Marco Antonio Coelho Bortoleto (Brazil), Olga Lucía Sorzano (Colombia), and Aastha Gandhi (India) have since published the first of two special issues of the peer-reviewed journal Circus: Arts, Life and Sciences.

    Focused on the theme “Transgressions and Challenges,” the articles include an exploration of the work of female porters — strong acrobats who lift, hold and support other acrobats — in circus, an account of the Brazilian circus company A Penca, whose work engages with climate emergency and a critical look on the emphasis on aesthetic innovation in circus training.

    The next CaiO conference is set for 2027 and will be held in Kerala, India. Based in Delhi, Aastha Gandhi is the co-organizer of the conference alongside Fricker and Batson.

    Circus, Gandhi said, is deeply woven into her country’s cultural tapestry.

    “Hosting CaiO in Kerala is a momentous occasion. There is a rich and complex history of circus in India, impacted for decades by shifting sociopolitical landscapes. To have visitors come from many places to celebrate the art and complexity of circus today presents an exciting opportunity to share our perspectives with the world,” Gandhi said.

    Given the widespread interest in CaiO from circus artists and academics alike over the past decade, Fricker and Batson are turning their sights on continuing to build the project in a sustainable way, including archiving conference materials and performances and identifying new leadership models that reflect the inclusive values of the project.

    “Experiencing the transformation of Circus and its Others into a robust, global inquiry is an immense privilege, and the work doesn’t stop here. We want to continue to help make space for the many diverse and beautiful voices of contemporary circus for years to come,” Batson said.

    CaiO has been supported by the Department of Dramatic Arts, the Dean of Humanities Discretionary Fund, the Humanities Research Institute, Office of the Vice-President Research, Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) of Canada, and the Canada Council for the Arts.

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  • Brock prof and alumna explore circus performance in joint publication

    Associate Professor of Dramatic Arts Karen Fricker and MA graduate Hayley Malouin at the conference Circus and its Others II in Prague this past August. The two have recently published a special double issue of Performance Matters, titled “Circus and Its Others,” exploring questions around circus performance and gender, difference and dis/ability. (Photo by David Konecny)


    (From The Brock News, Tuesday, Sept. 11, 2018 | by Alison Innes)

    For many people, the circus is a place of mystery and wonder, filled with the extraordinary, unusual and strange.

    But what does it mean to be different and what does it mean to perform those differences?

    For Associate Professor of Dramatic Arts Karen Fricker and Brock alumna Hayley Malouin (BA ’15, MA ’17), these questions have led to a joint publication in the emerging field of circus studies.

    The pair launched a special double issue of the journal Performance Matters, titled “Circus and Its Others,” Aug. 28 in Prague at the similarly named Circus and Its Others II conference.

    Inspired by the inaugural Encounters with Circus and its Others conference organized by Fricker with assistance from Malouin in 2016, the publication features contributions from established scholars, graduate students and circus artists from around the world. Many of the contributors were in Prague to participate in the second conference and celebrate at the launch.

    The conference series brings together scholars from around the world to explore questions about the place of difference and “otherness” in contemporary circus.

    “We’re asking questions about circus in a way that allows people who have been working at these questions from different perspectives and different places to jump on board,” says Fricker.

    Malouin, who has an undergraduate degree from Brock in Dramatic Arts, explored ideas of public performance, political protest and public performance of the grotesque as part of her MA in Studies in Comparative Literature and the Arts.

    “Circus is an interesting cultural touchstone because it reflects societal norms about people, community and politics. This is in contrast to the image of circus – which circuses themselves cultivate – as existing on the margins of society,” says Malouin.

    The special issue of Performance Matters was her first foray into academic publishing. In addition to co-editing the issue with Fricker, Malouin worked with other circus scholars, including Brock student Taylor Zajdlik (BA ’15, MA ’17), on a section of the journal exploring questions of queerness and freakery in the circus.

    “It was a great experience to establish myself as someone with those skills,” says Malouin. “I really care about the work, I feel it’s important. It’s a substantial contribution to an emerging field.”

    The special edition also includes work by DART Associate Professor David Fancy on disability and the circus, making reference to a creative research project in which he participated involving intellectually disabled survivors of institutional abuse.

    The questions Fricker and Malouin are researching have application beyond the circus to culture as a whole.

    “What we’re looking at is how questions about difference and otherness play out in certain practices in the contemporary moment,” says Fricker. “And more broadly we’re asking, how do we work to make culture more inclusive?”

    The full issue can be read online for free.

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