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Applied Theatre: Facilitation is the first publication that
directly explores the facilitator's role within a range of socially
engaged theatre and community theatre settings. The book offers a
new theoretical framework for understanding critical facilitation
in contemporary dilemmatic spaces and features a range of writings
and provocations by international practitioners and experienced
facilitators working in the field. Part One offers an introduction
to the concept, role and practice of facilitation and its
applications in different contexts and cultural locations. It
offers a conceptual framework through which to understand the idea
of critical facilitation: a political practice that that involves a
critical (and self-critical) approach to pedagogies, practices
(doing and performing), and resilience in dilemmatic spaces. Part
Two illuminates the diversity in the field of facilitation in
applied theatre through offering multiple voices, case studies,
theoretical positions and contexts. These are drawn from Australia,
Serbia, Kyrgyzstan, India, Israel/Palestine, Rwanda, the United
Kingdom and North America, and they apply a range of aesthetic
forms: performance, process drama, forum, clowning and playmaking.
Each chapter presents the challenge of facilitation in a range of
cultural contexts with communities whose complex histories and
experiences have led them to be disenfranchised socially,
culturally and/or economically.
Applied Theatre: Creative Ageing examines the complex social,
political and cultural needs of a diverse group in our society and
asks how contemporary applied theatre responds to those needs. It
allows an examination of innovative national and international
practice in applied theatre that responds to the needs of older
adults to encourage outcomes such as wellbeing and social
inclusion. The book does this while also questioning how we, as a
society, wish to respond to the complex needs of older adults and
the process of ageing and how applied theatre practices can help us
do so in a way that is both positive and inclusive. In Part One
Sheila McCormick reviews and historicises the practice of applied
theatre with, for and by the elderly. It argues that pioneering
applied theatre strategies are vital if the creative practice is to
respond to the growing needs of older members of society, and
reflects on particular cultural responses to ageing and the
elderly. The second part of the book is made up of essays and case
studies from leading experts and practitioners from Britain,
America and Australia, including consideration of applied theatre
approaches to dementia, health, wellbeing, social inclusion and
Alzheimer's disease.
Applied Practice: Evidence and Impact in Theatre, Music and Art
engages with a diversity of contexts, locations and arts forms -
including theatre, music and fine art - and brings together
theoretical, political and practice-based perspectives on the
question of 'evidence' in relation to participatory arts practice
in social contexts. This collection is a unique contribution to the
field, focusing on one of the vital concerns for a growing and
developing set of arts and research practices. It asks us to
consider evidence not only in terms of methodology but also in the
light of the ideological, political and pragmatic implications of
that methodology. In Part One, Matthew Reason and Nick Rowe reflect
on evidence and impact in the participatory arts in relation to
recurring conceptual and methodological motifs. These include
issues of purpose and obliquity; the relationship between evidence
and knowledge; intrinsic and instrumental impacts, and the value of
participatory research. Part Two explores the diversity of
perspectives, contexts and methodologies in examining what it is
possible to know, say and evidence about the often complex and
intimate impact of participatory arts. Part Three brings together
case studies in which practitioners and practice-based researchers
consider the frustrations, opportunities and successes they face in
addressing the challenge to produce evidence for the impact of
their practice.
At once both guide book and provocation, this is an indispensable
companion for students and practitioners of applied theatre. It
addresses all key aspects: principles, origins, politics and
aesthetics in a concise and accessible style designed to appeal
both to those who have recently discovered this sub-discipline and
to experienced practitioners and academics. Part 1 is divided into
two chapters. The first introduces the sub-discipline of Theatre
for Development, covering its origins, principles and history, and
providing an overview of theatre for development in Western
contexts as well as in Africa, Asia, the Indian Subcontinent and
Latin America. The second focuses upon theoretical and
philosophical issues confronting the discipline and its
relationship to contemporary politics, as well as considering its
future role. Part 2 consists of seven chapters contributed by
leading figures and current practitioners from around the world and
covering a diverse range of themes, methodologies and aesthetic
approaches. One chapter offers a series of case studies concerned
with sexual health education and HIV prevention, drawn from
practitioners working in Vietnam, Papua New Guinea, Southern
Africa, and China. Other chapters include studies of intercultural
theatre in the Peruvian Amazon; a programme of applied theatre
conducted in schools in Canterbury, New Zealand, following the 2010
earthquake; an attempt to reinvigorate a community theatre group in
South Brazil; and an exchange between a Guatemalan arts collective
and a Dutch youth theatre company, besides others.
"Applied Theatre: Aesthetics" re-examines how the idea of 'the
aesthetic' is relevant to performance in social settings. The
disinterestedness that traditional aesthetics claims as a key
characteristic of art makes little sense when making performances
with ordinary people, rooted in their lives and communities, and
with personal and social change as its aim. Yet practitioners of
applied arts know that their work is not reducible to social work,
therapy or education. Reconciling the simultaneous autonomy and
heteronomy of art is the problem of aesthetics in applied arts.
Gareth White's introductory essay reviews the field, and proposes
an interdisciplinary approach that builds on new developments in
evolutionary, cognitive and neuro-aesthetics alongside the politics
of art. It addresses the complexities of art and the aesthetic as
everyday behaviours and responses. The second part of the book is
made up of essays from leading experts and new voices in the
practice and theory of applied performance, reflecting on the key
problematics of applying performance with non-performers. New and
innovative practice is described and interrogated, and fresh
thinking is introduced in response to perennial problems.
Applied Theatre: Women and the Criminal Justice System offers
unprecedented access to international theatre and performance
practice in carceral contexts and the material and political
conditions that shape this work. Each of the twelve essays and
interviews by international practitioners and scholars reveal a
panoply of practice: from cross-arts projects shaped by
autobiographical narratives through to fantasy-informed cabaret;
from radio plays to film; from popular participatory performance to
work staged in commercial theatres. Extracts of performance texts,
developed with Clean Break theatre company, are interwoven through
the collection. Television and film images of women in prison are
repeatedly painted from a limited palette of stereotypes - 'bad
girls', 'monsters', 'babes behind bars'. To attend to theatre with
and about women with experience of the criminal justice system is
to attend to intersectional injustices that shape women's
criminalization and the personal and political implications of
this. The theatre and performance practices in this collection
disrupt, expand and reframe representational vocabularies of
criminalized women for audiences within and beyond prison walls.
They expose the role of incarceration as a mechanism of state
punishment, the impact of neoliberalism on ideologies of punishment
and the inequalities and violence that shape the lives of many
incarcerated women. In a context where criminalized women are often
dismissed as unreliable or untrustworthy, the collection engages
with theatre practices which facilitate an economy of credibility,
where women with experience of the criminal justice system are
represented as expert witnesses.
The book offers a compelling combination of analyis and detailed
description of aesthetic projects with young refugee arrivals in
Australia. In it the authors present a framework that
contextualises the intersections of refugee studies, resilience and
trauma, and theatre and arts-based practice, setting out a context
for understanding and valuing the complexity of drama in this
growing area of applied theatre. "Applied Theatre: Resettlement"
includes rich analysis of three aesthetic case studies in Primary,
Secondary and Further Education contexts with young refugees. The
case studies provide a unique insight into the different age
specific needs of newly arrived young people. The authors detail
how each group and educational context shaped diverse drama and
aesthetic responses: the Primary school case study uses process
drama as a method to enhance language acquisition and develop
intercultural literacy; the Secondary school project focuses on
Forum Theatre and peer teaching with young people as a means of
enhancing language confidence and creating opportunities for
cultural competency in the school community, and the further
education case study explores work with unaccompanied minors and
employs integrated multi art forms (poetry, art, drama, digital
arts, clay sculptures and voice work) to increase confidence in
language acquisition and explore different forms of expression and
communication about the transition process. Through its careful
framing of practice to speak to concerns of power, process,
representation and ethics, the authors ensure the studies have an
international relevance beyond their immediate context. "Drama,
Refugees and Resilience" contributes to new professional knowledge
building in the fields of applied theatre and refugee studies about
the efficacy of drama practice in enhancing language acquisition,
cultural settlement and pedagogy with newly arrived refugee young
people.
Applied Theatre: Performing Health and Wellbeing is the first
volume in the field to address the role that theatre, drama and
performance have in relation to promoting, developing and
sustaining health and wellbeing in diverse communities. Challenging
concepts and understanding of health, wellbeing and illness, it
offers insight into different approaches to major health issues
through applied performance. With a strong emphasis on the artistry
involved in performance-based health responses, situated within a
history of the field of practice, the volume is divided into two
sections: Part One examines some of the key questions around
research and practice in applied performance in health and
wellbeing, specifically addressing the different regional
challenges that dominate the provision of health care and influence
wellbeing: how the ageing population of the global north creates
pressure on lifetime healthcare provision, while the global south
is dominated by a higher birth rate and a larger population under
15 years old. Part Two comprises case studies and interviews from
international practitioners that reflect the diversity of practices
across the world and in particular differences between work in the
northern and southern hemispheres. These case studies include a
sanitation project in a Hmong refugee camp in Thailand in the
1980s, and the sanitation and rural development projects initiated
by the travelling theatre troupes of a number of University theatre
departments in Africa - Makerere in Kampala, Uganda; Botswana;
Lesotho and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania - which began in the 1960s. It
considers the emergence of Theatre for Development's use as a
health approach, considering the work of Laedza Batanani and the
influences of Augusto Boal's Theatre of the Oppressed.
The APPLIED THEATRE series is a major innovation in applied theatre
scholarship: each book presents new ways of seeing and critically
reflecting on this dynamic and vibrant field. Volumes offer a
theoretical framework and introductory survey of the field
addressed, combined with a range of case studies illustrating and
critically engaging with practice. Series Editors: Sheila Preston
and Michael Balfour Applied Theatre: Economies addresses a
notoriously problematic area: applied theatre's relationship to the
economy and the ways in which socially committed theatre makers
fund, finance or otherwise resource their work. Part One addresses
longstanding concerns in the field about the effects of economic
conditions and funding relationships on applied theatre practice.
It considers how applied theatre's relationship with local and
global economies can be understood from different theoretical and
philosophical perspectives. It also examines a range of ways in
which applied theatre can be resourced, identifying key issues and
seeking possibilities for theatre makers to sustain their work
without undermining their social and artistic values. The
international case studies in Part Two give vivid insights into the
day-to-day challenges of resourcing applied theatre work in Chile,
Canada, the UK, New Zealand, Hong Kong and the US. The authors
examine critical issues or points of tension that have arisen in a
particular funding relationship or from specific economic
activities. Each study also illuminates ways in which applied
theatre makers can bring artistic and social justice principles to
bear on financial and organizational processes.
Applied Theatre: Creative Ageing examines the complex social,
political and cultural needs of a diverse group in our society and
asks how contemporary applied theatre responds to those needs. It
allows an examination of innovative national and international
practice in applied theatre that responds to the needs of older
adults to encourage outcomes such as wellbeing and social
inclusion. The book does this while also questioning how we, as a
society, wish to respond to the complex needs of older adults and
the process of ageing and how applied theatre practices can help us
do so in a way that is both positive and inclusive. In Part One
Sheila McCormick reviews and historicises the practice of applied
theatre with, for and by the elderly. It argues that pioneering
applied theatre strategies are vital if the creative practice is to
respond to the growing needs of older members of society, and
reflects on particular cultural responses to ageing and the
elderly. The second part of the book is made up of essays and case
studies from leading experts and practitioners from Britain,
America and Australia, including consideration of applied theatre
approaches to dementia, health, wellbeing, social inclusion and
Alzheimer's disease.
"Applied Theatre: Aesthetics" re-examines how the idea of 'the
aesthetic' is relevant to performance in social settings. The
disinterestedness that traditional aesthetics claims as a key
characteristic of art makes little sense when making performances
with ordinary people, rooted in their lives and communities, and
with personal and social change as its aim. Yet practitioners of
applied arts know that their work is not reducible to social work,
therapy or education. Reconciling the simultaneous autonomy and
heteronomy of art is the problem of aesthetics in applied arts.
Gareth White's introductory essay reviews the field, and proposes
an interdisciplinary approach that builds on new developments in
evolutionary, cognitive and neuro-aesthetics alongside the politics
of art. It addresses the complexities of art and the aesthetic as
everyday behaviours and responses. The second part of the book is
made up of essays from leading experts and new voices in the
practice and theory of applied performance, reflecting on the key
problematics of applying performance with non-performers. New and
innovative practice is described and interrogated, and fresh
thinking is introduced in response to perennial problems.
At once both guide book and provocation, this is an indispensable
companion for students and practitioners of applied theatre. It
addresses all key aspects: principles, origins, politics and
aesthetics in a concise and accessible style designed to appeal
both to those who have recently discovered this sub-discipline and
to experienced practitioners and academics. Part 1 is divided into
two chapters. The first introduces the sub-discipline of Theatre
for Development, covering its origins, principles and history, and
providing an overview of theatre for development in Western
contexts as well as in Africa, Asia, the Indian Subcontinent and
Latin America. The second focuses upon theoretical and
philosophical issues confronting the discipline and its
relationship to contemporary politics, as well as considering its
future role. Part 2 consists of seven chapters contributed by
leading figures and current practitioners from around the world and
covering a diverse range of themes, methodologies and aesthetic
approaches. One chapter offers a series of case studies concerned
with sexual health education and HIV prevention, drawn from
practitioners working in Vietnam, Papua New Guinea, Southern
Africa, and China. Other chapters include studies of intercultural
theatre in the Peruvian Amazon; a programme of applied theatre
conducted in schools in Canterbury, New Zealand, following the 2010
earthquake; an attempt to reinvigorate a community theatre group in
South Brazil; and an exchange between a Guatemalan arts collective
and a Dutch youth theatre company, besides others.
The book offers a compelling combination of analyis and detailed
description of aesthetic projects with young refugee arrivals in
Australia. In it the authors present a framework that
contextualises the intersections of refugee studies, resilience and
trauma, and theatre and arts-based practice, setting out a context
for understanding and valuing the complexity of drama in this
growing area of applied theatre. "Applied Theatre: Resettlement"
includes rich analysis of three aesthetic case studies in Primary,
Secondary and Further Education contexts with young refugees. The
case studies provide a unique insight into the different age
specific needs of newly arrived young people. The authors detail
how each group and educational context shaped diverse drama and
aesthetic responses: the Primary school case study uses process
drama as a method to enhance language acquisition and develop
intercultural literacy; the Secondary school project focuses on
Forum Theatre and peer teaching with young people as a means of
enhancing language confidence and creating opportunities for
cultural competency in the school community, and the further
education case study explores work with unaccompanied minors and
employs integrated multi art forms (poetry, art, drama, digital
arts, clay sculptures and voice work) to increase confidence in
language acquisition and explore different forms of expression and
communication about the transition process. Through its careful
framing of practice to speak to concerns of power, process,
representation and ethics, the authors ensure the studies have an
international relevance beyond their immediate context. "Drama,
Refugees and Resilience" contributes to new professional knowledge
building in the fields of applied theatre and refugee studies about
the efficacy of drama practice in enhancing language acquisition,
cultural settlement and pedagogy with newly arrived refugee young
people.
Applied Theatre: Performing Health and Wellbeing is the first
volume in the field to address the role that theatre, drama and
performance have in relation to promoting, developing and
sustaining health and wellbeing in diverse communities. Challenging
concepts and understanding of health, wellbeing and illness, it
offers insight into different approaches to major health issues
through applied performance. With a strong emphasis on the artistry
involved in performance-based health responses, situated within a
history of the field of practice, the volume is divided into two
sections: Part One examines some of the key questions around
research and practice in applied performance in health and
wellbeing, specifically addressing the different regional
challenges that dominate the provision of health care and influence
wellbeing: how the ageing population of the global north creates
pressure on lifetime healthcare provision, while the global south
is dominated by a higher birth rate and a larger population under
15 years old. Part Two comprises case studies and interviews from
international practitioners that reflect the diversity of practices
across the world and in particular differences between work in the
northern and southern hemispheres. These case studies include a
sanitation project in a Hmong refugee camp in Thailand in the
1980s, and the sanitation and rural development projects initiated
by the travelling theatre troupes of a number of University theatre
departments in Africa - Makerere in Kampala, Uganda; Botswana;
Lesotho and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania - which began in the 1960s. It
considers the emergence of Theatre for Development's use as a
health approach, considering the work of Laedza Batanani and the
influences of Augusto Boal's Theatre of the Oppressed.
Applied Theatre: Facilitation is the first publication that
directly explores the facilitator's role within a range of socially
engaged theatre and community theatre settings. The book offers a
new theoretical framework for understanding critical facilitation
in contemporary dilemmatic spaces and features a range of writings
and provocations by international practitioners and experienced
facilitators working in the field. Part One offers an introduction
to the concept, role and practice of facilitation and its
applications in different contexts and cultural locations. It
offers a conceptual framework through which to understand the idea
of critical facilitation: a political practice that that involves a
critical (and self-critical) approach to pedagogies, practices
(doing and performing), and resilience in dilemmatic spaces. Part
Two illuminates the diversity in the field of facilitation in
applied theatre through offering multiple voices, case studies,
theoretical positions and contexts. These are drawn from Australia,
Serbia, Kyrgyzstan, India, Israel/Palestine, Rwanda, the United
Kingdom and North America, and they apply a range of aesthetic
forms: performance, process drama, forum, clowning and playmaking.
Each chapter presents the challenge of facilitation in a range of
cultural contexts with communities whose complex histories and
experiences have led them to be disenfranchised socially,
culturally and/or economically.
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