Derived from Anglo-Saxon research in human geographies and notably developed in the 1990s following the work of Nigel Thrift, ‘non-representational’ refers to various attempts at overcoming the human science’s tendency to privilege the representational model – i.e., a conception of thought considered as a prerequisite to the search for meaning and the accomplishment of action. To the contrary, non-representational approaches of the study of human experience emphasize the practices, materiality, incorporation, and the fundamental role of processes rather than results and productions.
Cite: “Non-representational Theory”, Performascope: Interdisciplinary Lexicon of Performance and Research-Creation, Grenoble: Université Grenoble Alpes, 2021, [online]: http://performascope.univ-grenoble-alpes.fr/en/detail/177907