Applied Theatre
Title | Applied Theatre PDF eBook |
Author | Sheila Preston |
Publisher | |
Pages | 254 |
Release | |
Genre | Community theater |
ISBN | 9781472576965 |
This volume explores the facilitator's role within a range of socially engaged theatre and community theatre settings. It examines 'who' the facilitator becomes when they facilitate, and how they perform and respond when working with different groups of people often in difficult and challenging circumstances.
Applied Theatre: Facilitation
Title | Applied Theatre: Facilitation PDF eBook |
Author | Sheila Preston |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 267 |
Release | 2016-10-20 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 1472576942 |
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.
Syrian Refugees, Applied Theater, Workshop Facilitation, and Stories
Title | Syrian Refugees, Applied Theater, Workshop Facilitation, and Stories PDF eBook |
Author | Fadi Skeiker |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 126 |
Release | 2020-12-30 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 100029014X |
This book analyzes and theorizes the efficacy of using applied theater as a tool to address refugee issues of displacement, trauma, adjustment, and psychological well-being, in addition to split community belonging. Fadi Skeiker connects refugee narratives to the themes of imagination, home, gender, and conservatism, among others. Each chapter outlines the author’s applied theater practice, as a Syrian, with and for Syrian refugees in the countries of Jordan, Germany, and the United States. This book will be of great interest to scholars, students, and practitioners of applied theater studies and refugee studies.
Applied Theatre: Facilitation
Title | Applied Theatre: Facilitation PDF eBook |
Author | Sheila Preston |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 267 |
Release | 2016-10-20 |
Genre | Drama |
ISBN | 1472576926 |
"Explores the facilitator's role within a range of socially engaged theatre and community theatre settings. ... Part One offers an introduction to the concept, role and practice of facilitation and its applications in different contexts and cultural locations. ... 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."--Back cover.
Applied Theatre: A Pedagogy of Utopia
Title | Applied Theatre: A Pedagogy of Utopia PDF eBook |
Author | Selina Busby |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Pages | 267 |
Release | 2022-10-06 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1350232815 |
Shortlisted for the 2022 TaPRA David Bradby Monograph Prize Applied Theatre: A Pedagogy of Utopia offers a critical consideration of long-term applied and participatory theatre projects. In doing so, it provides a timely analysis of concepts that inform applied theatre and outlines a new way of thinking about making theatre with differing groups of participants. The book problematizes key concepts including safe spaces, voice, ethical practice and resistance. Selina Busby analyses applied theatre projects in India, the USA and the UK, in youth theatres, homeless shelters, prisons and with those living in informal housing settlements to consider her key question: what might a pedagogy of utopia look like? Drawing on 20 years of practice in a range of contexts, this book focuses on long-term interventions that raise troubling questions about applied theatre, cultural colonialism and power, while arguing that community or participatory theatre conversely has the potential to generate a resilient sense of optimism, or what Busby terms, a 'nebulous utopia'.
Applied Theatre and Sexual Health Communication
Title | Applied Theatre and Sexual Health Communication PDF eBook |
Author | Katharine E. Low |
Publisher | Springer Nature |
Pages | 338 |
Release | 2020-11-05 |
Genre | Performing Arts |
ISBN | 1349959758 |
This book analyses the partnership between applied theatre and sexual health communication in a theatre-making project in Nyanga, a township in South Africa. By examining the bridges and schisms between the two fields as they come together in the project, an alternative way of approaching sexual health communication is advocated. This alternative considers what it is that applied theatre does, and could become, in this context. Moments of value which lie around the margins of the practice emerge as opportunities that can be overlooked. These somewhat ephemeral, intangible moments, which appear on the edges, are described as ‘apertures of possibility’ and occur when one takes a step back and realises something unnoticed in the moment. This book offers an invitation to pause and notice the seemingly insignificant moments that often occurs tangentially to the practice. The book also calls for more outcry about sexual health and sexual violence, arguing for theatre-making as a route to multitudes of voices, nuanced understandings, and diverse spaces in which discussions of sexuality and sexual health are shared, felt, and experienced.
Applied Theatre: Understanding Change
Title | Applied Theatre: Understanding Change PDF eBook |
Author | Kelly Freebody |
Publisher | Springer |
Pages | 187 |
Release | 2018-06-26 |
Genre | Education |
ISBN | 3319781782 |
This volume offers researchers and practitioners new perspectives on applied theatre work, exploring the relationship between applied theatre and its intent, success and value. Applied theatre is a well-established field focused on the social application of the arts in a range of contexts including schools, prisons, residential aged care and community settings. The increased uptake of applied theatre in these contexts requires increased analysis and understanding of indications of success and value. This volume provides critical commentary and questions regarding issues associated with developing, delivering and evaluating applied theatre programs. Part 1 of the volume presents a discussion of the ways the concept of change is presented to and by funding bodies, practitioners, participants, researchers and policy makers to discover and analyse the relationships between applied theatre practice, transformative intent, and evaluation. Part 2 of the volume offers perspectives from key authors in the field which extend and contextualize the discussion by examining key themes and practice-based examples.