For the past few years, we have published an end of year essay reflecting on the past twelve months and forecasting what is ahead. This year, I’d like to do something a bit different.
After fifteen years co-creating HowlRound in a variety of roles, and the last eight years as director, I am stepping down at the end of the year on the occasion of HowlRound’s fifteenth anniversary to make way for new leadership. This shift will also mark the start of independent operations for HowlRound as we move out of Emerson College to being fiscally sponsored by Producer Hub.
Given all of these changes, I want to look back not just at the last year, but the last fifteen, highlighting some of my journey with HowlRound and areas I’m most proud of. I’ll leave the looking forward to Ramona Rose King and Julia Schachnik, who will share more with you all about HowlRound’s upcoming plans in the new year.
I firmly believe that our field needs decommodified third spaces like HowlRound where we can illuminate what is already working, ideate on what’s not, and rehearse a better future together.
Growing the Commons
My journey with HowlRound has been one of unexpected twists and turns, learning and unlearning. I never could have imagined what began (for me at the ripe young age of twenty-six!) with P. Carl, David Dower, and Vijay Mathew out of a deep love for artists and a profound dissatisfaction with the institutional theatre status quo would have grown into the HowlRound we know today—a digital knowledge commons connecting thousands of cultural workers and theatre practitioners across the globe in real time.
At HowlRound our work has been a daily exercise in resisting enclosure through commons-based practice. What does this look like? A commitment to open participation, to inclusion, to access, and to a worldview that centers “we” over “me,” collaboration over competition, and abundance over scarcity. It’s an intentional cultivation of democratized space where power and privilege do not dictate whose voice is heard.
In “The Commons: Infrastructures for Troubling Times,” theorist Lauren Berlant writes that the commons is “a powerful vehicle for troubling troubled times…The commons is an action concept that acknowledges a broken world and the survival ethics of a transformational infrastructure.” HowlRound, as a commons-based platform, at its highest aspiration, models this transformational infrastructure. In a time of great precarity and possibility, I firmly believe that our field needs decommodified third spaces like HowlRound where we can illuminate what is already working, ideate on what’s not, and rehearse a better future together.
I am so proud of what we’ve accomplished over these years.
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Thanks, thanks, and evermore thanks!
It was an honor to work with you at HowlRound! I'm grateful for what y'all have done at HowlRound and look forward to seeing what comes next.