The Story
This book critically examines how knowledge is produced, experienced, and captured across disciplinary boundaries. It offers a practice-based framework for transdisciplinary research that integrates embodied, performative, empirical, and conceptual methodologies. The book engages with two key traditions—the Nicolescuian and Zürich approaches—before drawing on philosophy, cognitive science, performance, and systems thinking to develop a dynamic practice of knowledging: a way of doing and experiencing knowledge that resists disciplinary closure. Tools such as the active aesthetic and Integrative Performance Practice support this rethinking of how knowledge operates in action.
Structured in two parts and joined by a conceptual Intermezzo, the book’s first half maps core transdisciplinary traditions and critiques the historical formation of disciplinarity. A central chapter explores the politics of knowledge—power, value, failure, and collaboration—while surveying existing frameworks. The Intermezzo introduces non-linear perspectives, including systems thinking, rhizomes, and the holographic principle. Part II turns to embodied performance practice, establishing select aspects of creative process as a crucial contribution to serious epistemological practice. It incorporates enactivism to argue that knowledge is enacted through experience. Concepts such as event(ing) and the middle field offer tools for capturing knowledge in motion, supported by exercises and case studies.
Description
This book critically examines how knowledge is produced, experienced, and captured across disciplinary boundaries. It offers a practice-based framework for transdisciplinary research that integrates embodied, performative, empirical, and conceptual methodologies. The book engages with two key traditions—the Nicolescuian and Zürich approaches—before drawing on philosophy, cognitive science, performance, and systems thinking to develop a dynamic practice of knowledging: a way of doing and experiencing knowledge that resists disciplinary closure. Tools such as the active aesthetic and Integrative Performance Practice support this rethinking of how knowledge operates in action.
Structured in two parts and joined by a conceptual Intermezzo, the book’s first half maps core transdisciplinary traditions and critiques the historical formation of disciplinarity. A central chapter explores the politics of knowledge—power, value, failure, and collaboration—while surveying existing frameworks. The Intermezzo introduces non-linear perspectives, including systems thinking, rhizomes, and the holographic principle. Part II turns to embodied performance practice, establishing select aspects of creative process as a crucial contribution to serious epistemological practice. It incorporates enactivism to argue that knowledge is enacted through experience. Concepts such as event(ing) and the middle field offer tools for capturing knowledge in motion, supported by exercises and case studies.