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Showing 1 to 15 of 26 results Save | Export
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Frimberger, Katja – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2022
In this article, I explore Bertolt Brecht's philosophy of education with particular reference to his notion of the Verfremdungseffekt (estrangement effect) as brought to life in the art of gestic acting (Gestus). Giving examples from the 1960 "Mother Courage" DEFA film version of the play, I demonstrate how Brecht's philosophising…
Descriptors: Educational Philosophy, Acting, Drama, Behavior
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Michelle MacArthur; Kimberley McLeod; Scott Mealey – Research in Drama Education, 2024
This article examines the creation and reception of "The Stream You Step In," a digital series co-produced by Outside the March for University of Windsor students and performed live over Zoom in 2020. While Zoom is assumed to be a care-less medium, we argue that it offers new, altered modes of caring through its disruption of boundaries…
Descriptors: Drama Education, Foreign Countries, Universities, Videoconferencing
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Andersen, Jennifer – Research in Drama Education, 2020
Actors create theatre with and for with children in diverse theatrical, educational and therapeutic contexts but little is known about the 'artistry' of their practice. This paper analyses a theatrical encounter between a child and an actor and identifies four key qualities of 'pedagogically tactful' (van Manen 2016) actor practice: listening,…
Descriptors: Drama, Theater Arts, Adults, Children
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Allison Machlis Meyer – CEA Forum, 2023
This essay analyzes student experiences of studying all-female and non-binary cast Shakespeare productions in the Seattle area, including upstart crow collective's "Richard III" and The Fern Shakespeare Company's "Much Ado About Nothing." I draw on my teaching of the experimental work of these regional companies in an…
Descriptors: English Literature, Females, LGBTQ People, Minority Groups
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Rousell, David; Diddams, Natalie – Research in Drama Education, 2020
This article explores the affective dimensions of comedy education and performance through workshops with undergraduate acting students in Manchester, UK. Drawing on Suzanne Langer's process philosophy and recent research in affect studies, the authors compose complex mappings of affective intensity as it circulates through stand-up comedic…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Acting, Comedy
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Wannenburg, Nicola; van Niekerk, Roelf – Research in Drama Education, 2019
This paper engages with the medically established view that individuals with autism are not capable of play or being imaginative. This paper resists this idea by reflecting on psychobiographical research conducted on the life of Temple Grandin. By re-witnessing creative experiences in her life, dialogue surrounding the imaginative capacities of…
Descriptors: Autism, Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Imagination, Play
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Perkins, Kathleen M. – Teaching & Learning Inquiry, 2016
Theatre is a multi-dimensional discipline encompassing aspects of several domains in the arts and humanities. Therefore, an array of scholarly practices, pedagogies, and methods might be available to a SoTL researcher from the close reading of texts in script analysis to portfolio critiques in set, costume, and lighting design--approaches shared…
Descriptors: Scholarship, Instruction, Learning, Phenomenology
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Kelman, Dave; Rafe, Jane – Research in Drama Education, 2013
An artists' residency in a primary school in regional Victoria Australia staged a production of Shakespeare's "King Lear" in a local theatre. A qualitative, reflective practitioner research study into this project collected and analysed data from participating children and their community audience that gave some insight into their…
Descriptors: Drama, Dramatics, Theaters, Children
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Wilkie, Ian – London Review of Education, 2015
This article questions the current situation for vocational acting training (VAT) in the UK. It aims to provide an update on the report into burgeoning provision of acting training (and the attempt to address subsequent high rates of actor unemployment) that was originally undertaken by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation (CGF, 1975) in their…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Vocational Education, Drama, Dramatics
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Woodworth, Ann E. – Journal of General Education, 2014
Qatar can afford to purchase pretty much anything--including top-quality American university education. However, given the vast differences in culture, dress, religion, and social mores, along with youth's global unemployment rates and their hankering for all things technological, does it make sense for Qatar to import a course in acting? Many…
Descriptors: International Schools, Multicampus Colleges, Cultural Differences, Institutional Characteristics
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Hamel, Sonia – Research in Drama Education, 2013
On 6 February 2008, a deliberative theatre experiment was held at the "National Archives of Quebec". Inspired by the democratic virtues of public deliberation but preoccupied with its blind spots, Forum Theatre was used as a deliberative medium to initiate discussion about the social tensions between the homeless and other dwellers of…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Homeless People, Resistance (Psychology), Advocacy
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Shem-Tov, Naphtaly – Research in Drama Education, 2013
The casting of a black Ethiopian Jewish girl to play a white Zionist pioneer character in an Israeli school pageant causes feelings of discomfort among the teachers, especially the vice-principal. The vice-principal uses theatrical and historical reasons to justify her opposition to the casting which can actually be perceived as new/colour-blind…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Drama, Theater Arts, Acting
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Vanobbergen, Bruno; Simon, Frank – History of Education, 2011
At the end of the nineteenth century Aime Bogaerts, a Socialist primary school teacher at a Ghent municipal school and from 1901 on the chief editor of the Socialist newspaper "Vooruit", began a new educational initiative: "the children of the popular classes from Ghent" ("De Gentsche Volkskinderen"). Children from…
Descriptors: Children, Early Adolescents, Working Class, Acting
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Hargrave, Matt – Research in Drama Education, 2009
This paper reviews three pieces of contemporary theatre which feature learning-disabled actors. It identifies particularities of a context which has remained critically under-represented. The paper identifies such practice as transitional: from the margins of disability politics to the mainstream of the paying audience. The overarching question…
Descriptors: Mental Retardation, Drama, Social Attitudes, Foreign Countries
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Hargrave, Matt – Research in Drama Education, 2010
This article analyses Mind the Gap's Boo, a re-imagining of Harper Lee's "To Kill a Mockingbird", which features a cast of learning disabled actors. It is concerned with the public reception of the work, particularly the "effect" of an all-disabled cast. What are the consequences, both ethical and aesthetic, for these actors to tell this story on…
Descriptors: Novels, Media Adaptation, Drama, Learning Disabilities
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