This article explores the often normative and idealist notion of the public sphere at
its possible breaking point by analysing the online reactions to two tabloid articles about a 2016
performance of Dancing with Strangers: From Calais to England by Instant Dissidence. It first looks at
how a comment platform could be perceived as a subaltern public sphere and as a substitute for a live
audience in order to reconsider the notion of the counterpublic. For this, it examines the dialectical
tension between politics and aesthetics within a subaltern online public sphere not immune to all kinds
of extremism. This leads to an attempt to consider online hostile lay critics as a potentially legitimate
public to address the dilemma faced by contemporary artists when engaging with society in an
all-inclusive manner. Finally, this article offers a different reading of Instant Dissidence’s performance
and of the possible reasons for the commentators’ rage and alienation and proposes syncopolitics as a
way out of both online polarisation echo chambers and the public engagement conundrum.
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by MDPI under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Unported Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Acceptance date
2020-04-02
Publication date
2020-04-09
Copyright date
2020
Notes
Special Issue The Public Place of Drama in Britain, 1968 to the Present Day