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Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Working Group Session 1 Monday 5th September (1.45-3.45) Examining the space between and around an applied and a social theatre in Ireland Dr Michael Finneran (Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, Ireland) A tradition of applied theatre practice arguably does not exist in Ireland, nor indeed is there much evidence of a range of contemporary practice. There is a clear history, however, of performative and dramatic practices beyond theatre spaces which have a social orientation and function. The peculiar and complex relationship between theatre and the Irish identity and state has been examined in a range of recent volumes (Pilkington 2010, Lonergan 2010, Merriman 2011, Walsh 2013), and largely from post-colonial perspectives. This paper will examine the assertion that the dominant aesthetic in Irish theatre is in fact more aligned to a social/applied continuum rather than a literary/stage one. Such an examination and repositioning offers possibilities in a subversion and reconsideration of what is ‘normal’ and ‘native’ in Irish theatre. In undertaking this exploration, the paper will address one of the questions of the working group and examine how research in Irish theatre can offer hope to changing and challenging political and educational landscapes in the Rep. of Ireland. Lonergan, Patrick. 2010. Theatre and globalization: Irish drama in the Celtic Tiger era. London: Palgrave Macmillan. Merriman, Victor. 2011. Because we are poor: Irish theatre in the 1990s. Dublin: Carysfort Press. Pilkington, Lionel. 2010. Theatre & Ireland. Basingstoke, Hamps: Palgrave Macmillan. Walsh, Fintan, ed. 2013. 'That Was Us': Contemporary Irish Theatre and Performance. United Kingdom: Oberon Books. Michael Finneran is a senior lecturer in drama at Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick, Ireland, where he is Programme Director for the BA in Contemporary & Applied Theatre Studies. He is Reviews Editor and a member of the editorial board of RiDE: The Journal of Applied Theatre & Performance. Michael’s research interests lie in drama education, applied theatre, critical theory, social justice and teacher education. He has co-edited (with K. Freebody) Drama and Social Justice: Theory, research and practice in international contexts (Routledge, 2016), and is currently co-editing (with M. Anderson) a book entitled Education and Theatres: Innovation, Outreach and Success, to be published by Springer in 2017. Socially Engaged Theatre, Dislocation and Spirituality: Adrift Together Dr Zoe Zontou (Liverpool Hope University) The concept of emotional dislocation is a phenomenon that has become relevant in contemporary Europe. The economic crisis has led to an alarming increase in mental health, homelessness, drug addiction, and suicides (Martin-Carrasco et al., 2016). Problem drug users, the ‘addicts’, have been historically depicted as a symbol of the crisis of consumption and dislocation, a symbol of a fragmented society (Brodie and Redfield, 2002; Milhet, Bergeron, and Hunt, 2011). By taking into consideration the above arguments I am posing the Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs following questions: how can socially engaged theatre respond to the growing number of individuals who lack social connectedness? And, how the investigation of theatre projects with people in recovery from addiction (as the cultural symbols of dislocation), can supplement our understanding of the possibilities of social engaged theatre with other social groups that face similar issues? In this presentation, I respond to the above questions by examining the connections between socially engaged theatre, dislocation and spirituality. In doing so, I explore the work of Risen Dance Theatre Performance Group. Brodie, J.F. and Redfield, M. (eds.) (2002) High anxieties: Cultural studies in addiction. Berkeley: University of California Press. Martin-Carrasco, M., Evans-Lacko, S., Dom, G., Christodoulou, N.G., Samochowiec, J., González-Fraile, E., Bienkowski, P., Gómez-Beneyto, M., Santos, M.J.H. Dos and Wasserman, D. (2016) ‘EPA guidance on mental health and economic crises in Europe’, European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, 266(2), pp. 89–124. doi: 10.1007/s00406-016-0681-x. Milhet, M., Bergeron, H. and Hunt, G. (eds.) (2011) Drugs and culture: Knowledge, consumption and policy. United Kingdom: Ashgate Publishing. Zoe Zontou is a Lecturer in Drama and Theatre studies at Liverpool Hope University. Her principal research interests lie in the field of socially engaged theatre with people in recovery from alcohol and drug dependency. Her research covers a wide range of topics, including autobiography in performance, addiction studies and cultural policy, which are examined through their relationship with socially engaged theatre. She has worked as a practitioner and researcher in a number of organisations, and has published in the area of socially engaged theatre research and practice. Applied and Social Arts from Universities to Communities: Transdisciplinary or Undisciplinary? Mia Perry (University of Glasgow) This paper considers the changing dynamic between the ‘social’ and the ‘arts’ of social and applied arts today. This paper is about the gap, the journey, the opportunities, and the challenges in that dynamic. I propose to examine this current and growing gap between the ‘social’ and the ‘arts’ in three parts: 1. An autobiographical narrative of someone who began as an actor, turned advocate, turned academic, and with each turn moved further and further away from making art. 2. A conceptual enquiry into the growing distance between on the one end, community development, youth work, and civic engagement and on the other end, contemporary, applied and social arts. I draw on contemporary theory in cultural studies, social geography, and applied arts along with illustrative practices in community development and regeneration, and social arts. 3. A case study example of seized opportunity in a spacious divide. This third section will describe a recent collaboration between a department of theatre and a community development programme at the University of Glasgow. This presentation will include both a discursive analysis of our contemporary field -- positioned as we are across disciplines and fields of practice -- as well as critique of a field becoming increasing divided by funding and institutional structures. Finally, the presentation is a Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs provocation to new relationships, new discourses, and allegiances to always emerging and always susceptible art forms. Mia Perry works in the intersections of contemporary cultural practices and public pedagogies. She is interested in the pedagogical affordances of making and witnessing arts and culture, the relationships (human and non-human) inherent in every learning engagement, and a perspective on those engagements that accounts for more than the representable signifiers. Mia did her MA at Central, and her PhD at UBC, Vancouver, Canada. She then held an assistant professorship with the Faculty of Education, University of Regina, Saskatchewan. In relocating to Europe, she worked in the NGO sector for 2 years as the Research Director of an international children’s charity, the ecl foundation. Mia is a Senior Lecturer at the University of Glasgow. What next for the Theatre for Development ‘actor’? Suggesting some possibilities for mutual learning between the fields of applied theatre and global development Bobby Smith (Phd Candidate, University of Manchester) Ahmed (2002) argues that TfD cannot navigate the neo-colonial problematics he associates with development. Similarly, Prenkti (2015) proposes that TfD has found itself at a crossroads. Turn right and continue down a path of accommodation where TfD ‘become[s] the exclusive property of government [...] NGOs and be wielded as a tool to encourage ‘prosocial’ behaviour’’ (ibid. p.246), or take a left and struggle down an awkward, endless path concerned with the right for each human being to live creatively and not for the profit of others. Plastow (2014) shows how susceptible TfD is to being hijacked by governments, donors and NGOs, suggesting that the rightwards turn is the path more well-trodden. So, what are we do to? Withdrawing from such uses is not an option: the development sector will continue to use drama regardless. In this paper I draw on interviews with over 50 international practitioners and organisations in order to gain a deeper insight into the problematics and possibilities of theatre and development partnerships. I build on these interviews through paying attention to contemporary discourses in development and suggest that not only do these voices indicate a space of radical possibility for theatre makers, they also provide a challenge in terms of how we think about and ‘do’ TfD. Ahmed, S.J (2002) Wishing for a World without 'Theatre for Development': Demystifying the case of Bangladesh, Research in Drama Education: The Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance, 7:2, 207219, DOI: 10.1080/1356978022000007983 Plastow, J. (2014) ‘Domestication or Liberation? The ideology of Theatre for Development in Africa’, Applied Theatre Research, Volume 2, Number 2, 1 July 2014, pp.107-118(12) Prenkti, T. (2015) Applied Theatre: Development, Bloomsbury Methuen Drama, London. Bobby Smith is a practitioner who has worked in community, educational and criminal justice settings in the UK and internationally. He currently freelances for a number of organisations in the UK, and is involved with projects in Uganda and with Amani People’s Theatre in Kenya. He is researching for a PhD exploring aspects of equitability, partnership and knowledge in theatre and international development at Manchester University. His research interests include many Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs aspects of applied theatre, arts and culture in international development and the role of the applied theatre facilitator. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Working Group Session 2 Tuesday 6th September (9.30 -11.00) The spaces in between. Relationships in participatory work Sue Mayo (Goldsmiths, University of London) In his book A Fortunate Man (1967) John Berger reflects on the ways in which the GP, John Sassall negotiates his place as an outsider, and builds connections in the village where he works. This happens partly through becoming involved in joint enterprises. Berger points to an occasion when Sassall is part of a group of men who are trying to mend a car engine. ‘It is as though the speakers bend over the subject to examine it in precise detail, until, bending over it their heads touch’. The meeting place, where connections are made, is the work. In this paper I want to examine the building of connectivity through the enterprise of making a piece of work together. As I have written elsewhere, a project can create an exoskeleton, holding a group of individuals through its purpose and direction, and allowing them to co-create bonds within it. Claire Bishop cautions against valuing work only because of the social bonds created (The Social Turn: Collaboration and its Discontents ARTFORUM 2006), but I am aware that what manifests between people, and not only within individuals, in terms of growth, experimentation, connection, impacts the work being made, and the experience of making. I will revisit research that I have undertaken for Magic Me, into the way in which different art forms invite participants to connect with one another in very diverse ways, (Detail and Daring 2010), and introduce my current research project, where I am examining the action of gratitude within three participatory projects, a ‘granularity of tiny interactions’1 that create a reciprocity that strengthens the individual and the group. Sue Mayo is a freelance theatre maker, who has been working in a wide range of settings for more than 30 years. Sue specialises in devising theatre with community groups, and frequently works across art forms, in collaboration with others. Most recently she worked with 16 women, aged between 14 and 83, on a dance piece, ‘I live in it’ for International Women’s Day. In 2015 she directed ‘Speak as you find’ a site specific performance piece based on a year of research into conflicting narratives of life in Tower Hamlets. She is currently spending a year of Research and Development, funded by the Arts Council. Sue has worked with LIFT on developing the opening up of their ‘Living Archive’, and extensively with the National Trust on theatre projects within heritage settings. She lectures in the Theatre and Performance Department at Goldsmith’s, University of London, where she is Convenor of the MA in Applied Theatre. The challenge of disciplinary instrumentalism within cross-disciplinary applied theatre research Dr Laura Purcell-Gates (Bath Spa University) In Theatre for Change: Education, Social Action and Therapy (2012), editors Robert J. Landy and David T. Montgomery stage a constructed dialogue between applied theatre researcherpractitioners on several key issues for the field, including the persistent challenge of aesthetics versus instrumentalism. During the (imagined) discussion on the meaning of ‘change’, Philip Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Taylor raises the issue of evidence-based transformation and how that can present a challenge to theatrical research in ‘this neo-positivist era where we have to constantly justify our existence’ (p. 233). I propose that this challenge, a familiar one within applied theatre, represents an instance of disciplinary instrumentalism, in which applied theatre is at risk of becoming instrumental to qualitative, scientific research within the context of increasing interest in crossdisciplinary research within both universities and funding bodies. I therefore propose a two-fold provocation for applied theatre within the context of cross-disciplinary research: Challenge: What are the risks and implications of such disciplinary instrumentalism? Potential: In what ways might applied theatre claim the centrality of alternative approaches to ‘change’, and how might this reframe the function of qualitative methodologies within such research? Taken further, what can the sciences can learn from applied theatre? For this provocation I draw on two of my research projects. The first, a Wellcome Trust-funded project on biomedical history of disability in collaboration with a university pathologist, foregrounded theatrical engagement with the story of a medical and historical ‘monster’ including research with disability arts practitioners and disabled workshop participants, producing change in biomedical knowledge. For the second, an upcoming project on puppetry as intervention in trauma with teenage asylum seekers and refugees that draws on qualitative methods, I am currently grappling with how intervention is framed as my academic collaborator from the field of psychology works with me to articulate intervention from a rigorously theatrical standpoint. Dr Laura Purcell-Gates is Senior Lecturer in Drama at Bath Spa University and Artistic Director of Wattle and Daub, a UK-based puppetry company. Her main areas of research concern theatre and puppetry for social change, with a focus on constructions of and artistic processes involving bodies, puppets and performing objects. Her current research, funded by the Wellcome Trust, examines intersections of puppetry, disability and biomedical history. Her upcoming research will look at puppetry and object performance as intervention in trauma with teenage asylum seekers and refugees, in collaboration with Husam Abed, a Palestinian refugee puppetry artist from Dafa Puppet Theatre, Jordan. ‘Invisible presences: the liminality of puppetry in applied drama in Northern Ireland and South Africa’ (David Grant, Queen’s University Belfast) With reference to short video clips of community-based performances in the Tiger’s Bay area of North Belfast, and in Barrydale in South Africa’s Western Cape, this short ‘provocation’ will suggest that hand-manipulated life-size puppets can provide a liminal medium for the exploration of problematic ideas in divided societies. In Belfast, the use of puppets facilitated direct engagement with challenging themes of inter-community reconciliation amid the confusion of local divisions left unresolved by Northern Ireland’s protracted Peace Process. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs In Barrydale, a performance about the history of slavery by the local Cape Coloured community used puppets to represent white characters in the story before a largely white audience in a town where housing is still substantially divided along racial lines. In both contexts, community divisions are reflected in the local geography: in Tiger’s Bay, so-called Peace Walls separate the residents of the area from their Catholic neighbours; in Barrydale the Coloured township sits invisible from the town itself behind the brow of a hill, the result of the enforced sundering of the community under Apartheid. While the selected performances are very different (the one in Belfast workshop-based and intimate, the one in Barrydale a huge outdoor spectacle), in both cases the use of puppetry allowed performers to exist in a liminal space between presence and invisibility, simultaneously seen and unseen as the audience’s attention was drawn towards the puppets they were manipulating. This research has arisen from a visit to Belfast by Dr Aja Marneweck from the University of Cape Town, who was the Artistic Director of the Barrydale performance. It is hoped that this collaboration may form the basis for an international networking bid to the AHRC on the theme of ‘Objects with Objectives’, looking more widely at the use of puppets in applied drama which may be of interest to the Working Group. David Grant, a Senior Lecturer in Drama at Queen’s University, Belfast, has enjoyed a diverse career in theatre as a director, teacher and critic. His research interests include acting and directing, educational and community-based drama, prison arts, arts and health and Irish theatre. Recent projects include Days in the Bay, a short performance inspired by the changing streetscape of North Belfast and At Home With Oscar Wilde in Florence Court House, Enniskillen for the 2015 Wilde Weekend. In August 2015 he was Director of the 1st Brian Friel Summer School. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Working Group Session 3 Tuesday 6th September (4.00 – 5.30) Applied Theatre and Ageing: An examination of the Elders Company, the Royal Exchange Theatre, Manchester Sheila McCormick (University of Salford) According to recent government figures, one specific section of our society is set to rise exponentially over the next twenty years. Indeed, while ten million people in the UK are currently over sixty five years old, the latest projections suggest there will be five and a half million more older adults in twenty years’ time with the number nearly doubling to nineteen million by 2050. While applied theatre has developed as an umbrella term for a number of different socially creative practices, each of those practices must consider the individual characteristics of the group it engages. Applied theatre developed with, for and by older adults is as specialised as any other applied practice and, as such, must be adaptable to the needs of the community it serves. As the elderly population grows, so too does our understanding of their diverse and complex social, cultural and medical needs. With this understanding comes initiatives to move away from medical models of care and pharmaceutical intervention towards social and cultural alternatives that are person centred and encourage both social inclusion and wellbeing. Examining the practice of the Elders Company at the Royal Exchange, Manchester, this paper asks if applied theatre practice can address the political, cultural and social position of older adults. It will examine the socially engaged practice of The Elders to consider how applied theatre addresses the needs of older adults and responds to the process of ageing in a bid to encourage life enhancing outcomes such as increased health and wellbeing and decreased social isolation. Sheila McCormick is a lecturer at the University of Salford. Her research interests and publications to date address an interest in documentary, political, Irish and applied theatre. Drawing on her experience as a former nurse, Sheila has an interest in performance and health. She is currently completing a monograph entitled Applied Theatre: Creative Ageing for Methuen Drama and is in the process of developing her practice as research project on performance and palliative care. Slowing down: applied theatre in care homes and the practice of attunement Dr Nicky Hatton (University of Winchester) This paper considers the value of slowness when doing theatre practice in care homes. In a funding climate where artists are often reliant on short-term project funding, theatre work in care settings is often affected by durational restrictions. Furthermore, artists are increasingly under pressure from funders to create a model of practice which can be rolled out across several care homes. These restrictions affect the extent to which artists are able to develop a relationship with a care home, and design a project around the needs of its staff and residents. Drawing on my own work in care homes, this paper advocates for ‘slower collaborations’ between artists and care homes, which take account of the Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs individual qualities of a care community. Inspired by Petra Kuppers’ and Shannon Jackson’s work on the ‘social aesthetics of pace’, it considers the significance of slowness, both as a quality of participation, and as partnership model for artists and care homes. It explores how time and pace are experienced differentially by residents, particularly those who are living with dementia, and suggests some ways in which artists might attend creatively to the different temporalities of everyday life in a care home. It argues that theatre practice in care homes requires a particular type of attunement; one which requires artists to reconfigure their own pace and to engage in what Jackson describes as ‘a new dialogue of being in space’. It concludes by considering the significance of this type of attunement for applied theatre practice both inside and outside care settings. Nicky Hatton is a theatre practitioner and a lecturer in Drama at the University of Winchester. As a practitioner she has worked with Hampstead Theatre, Arcola Theatre, The Library Theatre Manchester, and several health and education providers in London and the North-West. Her current research explores cultural responses to dementia care and the creative role of artists in care settings. She is a 2013 fellow of the Winston Churchill Memorial Trust, where she researched theatre and dementia in North America. Benevolent Rebellion: The role of embodied evaluation in arts and health Emily Hunka (Theatre Troupe) At Choreographing Evaluation held by Children and Youth Evidence Hub Project Oracle (November 2014), delegates heard contrasting approaches to arts and health methodology, from evaluators, policy-makers and artists, and participated together in a co-production of knowledge through break-out discussions and a Long Table event (Weaver). An overwhelming number of comments expressed frustration at ‘having to evidence the arts work [artists] do through TERMINOLOGIES and TEMPLATES which are stark and business-influenced’ (Martin, 2015)’ and soundly endorsed a narrative-based approach with photographs and videos ‘speaking for themselves.’ (Barnes 2014, Baker, 2014). Visual minutes from the day recorded the action to: ‘use [the word] “revolution” … start [one] HERE’. However, a subsequent policy document Arts for Health and Wellbeing: An evaluation framework (Public Health England, the University of Winchester, AESOP 2016), ignores this collective call: it advocates for ‘robust evidence of [arts] effectiveness in impacts and costs’ and suggests a one-size-fits-all method ‘modelled on standard public health evaluation frameworks’ (Daykin 2016). The fact that Tim Joss, AESOP’s Chief Executive was present throughout Choreographing Evaluation is indicative of a prevailing dismissal of creative and embodied evaluative approaches. The ‘coming of age for arts and health’ (Clift, 2008) adheres firmly to the instrumentalist’s way of doing things. This paper will present a suggestion that an urgent artist-led rebellion is needed, and that applied theatre practice-as-research is in a critical place to lead it. It will present a case study, Theatre Troupe currently trialling an embodied evaluation technique called Creative Listening in answer to a Choreographing Evaluation’s minute to evaluate by harnessing a process of humanity. It also, however, belongs in the “hard” science of neurobiology, which suggests mental healing happens through stimulation of mirror neurons in what psychiatrists Lewis Amini and Lannon call ‘collaborative dance of love’. The practice- Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs research model includes artists, artist-researchers, psychiatrists, clinical researchers and young participants. It draws on the closeness of human bonds in workshop and performance to identify impact: Applied theatre’s particular expertise in the embodied scholarship of ‘sharing breath’ (Dolan, 2005) is a powerful way to defeat ‘insidious instrumentalism’ (Giroux 2014). Emily Hunka is a playwright and theatre facilitator. She researched, designed and produced WHATEVER Makes You Happy Project at GLYPT for young people with mental health problems, and co-founded Theatre Troupe in 2014. She has also worked as Performing Arts Director for Mind In Harrow 2011-2013, with adult mental health service users. Previous to her work in mental health, she worked for over a decade creating and delivering arts programmes with young refugees, including starting the charity Rewrite. She is currently undertaking a practicebased research PHD at Queen Mary University London, based on Theatre Troupe’s work. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Open Panel Weds 7th September (10.30 – 12.00) Image Theatre as Research Method: Gauging diverse views and perceptions of academic staff Michael Carklin (University of South Wales) This paper reports on research that I have been undertaking investigating the use of image and tableau based drama activities with groups of university staff to gauge their thoughts, perceptions and experiences of their work within higher education. Contributing to staff development and to promoting a dynamic ethos of sharing and reflection, I have been piloting these approaches as a research method specifically. Drawing on approaches to multimodality and visual research analysis, I have been exploring formal ways of analysing the kinds of material that emerge in participatory drama work in a higher education staff context. Further, in capturing some of the range, diversity and complexity of staff views in the University that I am part of, this project has necessarily confronted me with finding appropriate approaches to dealing with the ethical challenges of insider research. With my own background in applied and educational drama, the applying of drama in this particular context has allowed me to confront and subvert some of these challenges, and to access a diverse range of responses that are not bound by the language and jargon of a meeting room. Part of this research thus includes investigating the significance of embodiment in a participatory and collaborative context. Whilst image and tableau work have been used in a range of different contexts such as community development and education, its potential as a research method specifically is worthy of further investigation, and so the approach I have been investigating I have termed ‘Collaborative Embodied Participant Analysis’ (CEPA). This paper will explain my understanding of this application of drama image work as a method, including workshop structure, facilitation, recording and documentation, transcription and analysis. Michael Carklin is Principal Lecturer in Drama at the University of South Wales in Cardiff, UK. He has particular research interests in Applied Drama, Teaching & Learning in Higher Education, and Theatre & Science. Polyphonic amplitudes: practice research in applied theatre practice Sally Mackey (The Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, University of London) Applied theatre practice research might be perceived as an ill-matched methodological conflation and this paper engages with the paradoxes and conundrums of such a pairing. Beginning with identifying why a consideration is timely, I move on to suggest that the ‘authorship’ of practice research in applied theatre is particularly interesting where much research is led rather than embodied. After invoking ‘the social turn’ and ‘the practical turn’ as contributing to the challenges for applied theatre practice as research, the piece uses two AHRC-funded projects to incite a different approach. A metaphor of polyphonic conversation is offered as an amplification of the applied theatre practice research methodological terrain. This metaphor encourages an axiom of many voices contributing to research, albeit with different forms of knowledge, potentially easing concerns about power hierarchies and knowledge production. It also vaunts a fluidity of epistemology, Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs expanding on the now familiar debates around theory and practice, and particularly relevant for socially engaged performance-related practical research. Sally Mackey is professor of applied theatre and performance at Central, establishing the field there over 20 years ago. There are more than 300 students from undergraduate to PhD level in applied theatre at Central. Her research focuses on the performance of place as a participant activity and she have received four AHRC awards over time to develop this conceptually and practically: Challenging Liquid Place (2011 -2014) is currently followed by Performing Local Places (2016-2017), for example. Together with Deirdre Heddon, she is co-editing a series, Performing Landscapes. Applied Theatre as Research: scoping the possibilities for participatory knowledge generation Michael Anderson (The University of Sydney) Peter O’Connor (The University of Auckland) This paper examines the potential for applied theatre as a research method. The context of the applied theatre as research (ATAR) approach is discussed, positioning the methodology within the community-based participatory research (CBPR) tradition and providing a discussion of the relationship between applied theatre as research (ATAR), participatory action research (PAR) and performance ethnography. The method is briefly outlined in terms of its philosophical and political positioning. ATAR positions research participants as ‘actors’ and, through various aesthetic approaches (including drama, music visual arts and dance), provides opportunities for them to create meaning that can be applied to research questions. Through a case study of developed in Redfern, Sydney, Australia in partnership with a large non-government organization (NGO) and young Aboriginal participants paper will critically examine the issues of power, agency and choice and attempt to problematize this approach as way of foregrounding the potential challenges and opportunities of this approach. The paper concludes with a discussion with the ways forward for this approach and an exploration of its applications in diverse research contexts. Michael Anderson is Professor of Arts and Creativity Education in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at the University of Sydney. His research and teaching concentrates on how arts educators and other community-focused professionals begin, evolve and achieve change in schools and other communities. This work has evolved into a programme of research and publication. His recent research and publications focus on the role of Applied Theatre for research. Peter O’Connor is Professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Auckland. His research focuses on using applied theatre as a public-education medium to address major social issues, including public health, gender equity in schools and the development of inclusive, empathetic and critical school cultures. Recent applied theatre research includes national programmes on preventing family violence and child abuse and parenting programmes in youth justice facilities. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Working Group Session 4 Wednesday 7th September (2.00 – 4.00) Authorship, language and rigour in the ‘second wave’ of applied practice research A joint presentation on the speakers’ respective use of two alternative models for harnessing and representing participants’ knowledge in the reporting of applied practice research: dialogic portfolio, and collaborative action research. Disentangling voices in dialogue: the storytelling exchange as a model for reporting research Catherine Heinemeyer (PhD candidate at York St John University) One means of attaining Robin Nelson’s ‘intersubjective rigour’ in participatory applied research is to make visible our collaborative workings. Writing participatory arts research may be a relational process, but as such it need not iron out the asymmetries and even ‘antagonism’ (Claire Bishop 2004) between those involved. Julian Stern advocates that, rather than seeking to represent participants’ collective ‘voice’, we facilitate the heteroglot dialogue of multiple ‘voices’ (2015). Some of these voices may wish to waive their anonymity and emerge as coauthors in dialogue, representing themselves in their own words and ‘social languages’ (see Judith Schulman’s 1990 research with teachers). I give examples from my practice-research collaborations with young people through story, in which our performances have made explicit the dialogue and often the dissensus in our storytelling exchange, where multiple meanings compete in the space between teller and listener. I suggest that the ‘second wave’ of practice research represents an opportunity to further dissolve the boundaries around ‘applied’ arts research, and bring its rich diversity of perspectives into mainstream theatre research. It challenges us to invite participants and practitioner-collaborators to join the ‘approved’ community of partners in the research dialogue - both as readers and named writers, receivers and givers of counsel. Bishop, Claire (2004) ‘Antagonism and Relational Aesthetics’, October Magazine 110, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, pp.51-79 Nelson, Robin (2013) Practice as Research in the Arts: Principles, Protocols, Pedagogies, Resistances. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. Shulman, Judith (1990) ‘Now you see them, now you don’t: anonymity versus visibility in case studies of teachers’, Educational Researcher 19:6, August 1990, pp.11-15 Stern, Julian (2015) ‘Children’s Voice or Children’s Voices? How educational research can be at the heart of schooling’. FORUM 57:1, pp.75-90 Iterations of collaborative enquiry: seeking a participatory and situated knowledge of the experience of arts in mental health Elanor Stannage, (PhD candidate York St John University) In the quest for intersubjective rigour (Robin Nelson 2013) and a situated knowledge (Donna Haraway 1988: 593) of arts in mental health practice and how it might relate to impact in mental health, I combine a collaborative action research model with arts-based research methods. Through four iterations of collaborative inquiry: action research cycles, an analysis forum, narrative interviews and a process mapping workshop, themes of process are Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs explored collaboratively from the multiple perspectives of workshop participant, facilitator and multi-positional researcher. The methodology of action research offers a framework for a more explicit and transparent understanding of collaborative enquiry. Where knowledge grounded in existing theory may be exchanged for knowledge where experience of practice, experience of life and theory are intertwined through the iterative collaborative process yielding new possibilities of situated, participatory knowledge. Elden and Levin’s co-generative model of action research (1991: 130 cited in Madsen 2013: 309) where the differing aims of the ‘participant’ and ‘researcher’ converge and diverge at different stages of the research process illuminates these complex, fluid research processes which mirror the complexities of applied practice. I suggest such an approach to research allows for a nuanced, co-generated knowledge of experiential process in practice whilst facilitating space for commonality and difference of experience and for different voices within research outputs. Haraway, Donna (1988) Situated Knowledges: The Science Question in Feminism and the Privilege of Partial Perspective. Feminist Studies, 14 (3), pp.575-599. Madsen, Janne (2013) Narratives as a tool when working for equality in action research: a description and discussion of the researcher’s experiences from a school development project in Norway. Educational Action Research, 21 (3), pp.307-325. Nelson, Robin (2013) Practice as Research in the Arts: Principles, Protocols, Pedagogies, Resistances. Basingstoke: Palgrave MacMillan. Catherine Heinemeyer is a storyteller specialising in story in community and youth settings and in response to environmental change. She is currently in the final year of a practice-as-research PhD developing a participatory practice of storytelling with adolescents. This research is based in the International Centre for Arts and Narrative (ICAN), a partnership between York St John University and York Theatre Royal, and is funded by an AHRC Collaborative Doctoral Award. She is an experienced university teacher and a Fellow of the Higher Education Association. Her research blog is at www.storytellingwithadolescents.blogspot.co.uk . Elanor Stannage is a theatre practitioner working across diverse communities with a particular focus upon people who may be at risk of marginalisation. She has extensive experience of working in the contexts of mental health and learning disabilities. Currently in the writing up period of a PhD studentship in arts in mental health at York St John University, co-funded by the NHS, her research explores the experiential processes of such practice for participants and facilitators. Tiny theatre-goers: spectatorship and social bonds in Theatre for Early Years Ben Fletcher-Watson (University of Edinburgh) Emma Miles (Royal Holloway University of London) Katherine Morley (University of Manchester) This panel explores contemporary Theatre for Early Years (TEY) in the UK, focusing in particular on new theories of spectatorship relating to very young children. The slow decline of Theatre in Education has been countered by a burgeoning professional children’s theatre movement which Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs tours to theatres rather than schools, promotes innovation and high production values, and looks ‘beyond local and regional impact towards building an international reputation’ (Tomlin 2015, p.78). In particular, as creative interest and innovation in theatre for young audiences continues, the spotlight falls increasingly on pre-schoolers. New modes of performance are emerging which implicitly reject learning as a consequence of drama, offering instead innovative practices which reformulate the spectatorial relationship between baby and adult, performer and spectator, parent and child. What are the influences – social, experiential, dramaturgical – driving these changes? How do multidisciplinary work and the abandonment of traditional pedagogies affect TEY? What does it mean to be a baby spectator? Everyone can see everyone: the impact of new dramaturgies on Early Years audiences Ben Fletcher-Watson Taking Scotland as a site for investigation, I will present a recent survey of children’s theatremakers, highlighting an emergent dramaturgy of Theatre for Early Years (TEY) that may trouble traditional conceptions of the spectator-performer relationship. TEY pioneers describe the ‘triangular audience’ made up of parent, baby and performer (Desfosses 2009), but contemporary critics are seeking to expand the phenomenological experience to create complex networks of spectators whose interactions are physical, tactile or kinaesthetic, rather than verbal. Matthew Reason has claimed that "in the theatre each individual's attention is focused on the performance; nobody is looking at the audience" (2010, p.172), but this is not necessarily the case in TEY. Parents now share the experience with other parents and other babies (especially during performances staged in-the-round), forming a web of connectivity. Neuroscientists Jackie Eunju Chang and Young Ai Choi maintain that “‘watching theatre together’ is a social activity focusing on ‘shared emotion’ with actors and other audience members… [children] do not have many actual physical opportunities to ‘feel together’” (2015, p.41). In addition to this spectatorial web, where everyone can see everyone, the mythology of the performance is often itself expanded, spilling out beyond temporal or spatial bounds, and becoming accessible to the child at all times and in all places, a dramaturgical effect which has been termed ‘narrative bleed’ (Fletcher-Watson 2016). This paper examines three recent TEY productions, arguing that the distinctive dramaturgy emerging within Scotland simultaneously provokes and responds to the interconnectivity of the very young audience, generating cultural modalities which implicitly reject the pedagogic, instrumentalist spectatorship of the past. Bus Journeys, Playing and Performance: the 'event' of theatre-going for early years audiences Emma Miles As performance for young children occurs increasingly in theatre buildings, necessitating journeys from children's homes and schools in order to attend, there are specific considerations surrounding what Marvin Carlson has referred to as “the entire event structure” (1989, p.164) of theatre-going. Between May 2014 and June 2015, I made seven visits to watch Theatre for Early Years (TEY) performances at Polka Theatre in South-West London, accompanied by a small group of Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs three and four year old children from a local nursery. I began this research project interested specifically in performance made for the very young, but came to an understanding of how irrevocably tied the experience of performance can be to all that goes alongside it. For these young children, breaking the nursery routine to go to the theatre for the first time was a significant event; from the bus journey through unfamiliar streets, to playing in the theatre foyer beforehand, to entering the darkened theatre space, it was an experientially rich few hours filled with different emotions, new places, sights and sounds. Using this ethnographic case study as a basis, this paper offers an exploration of our experiences visiting Polka Theatre that fall outside of, albeit relating to, the performance itself. In this, I consider the unique experiential and pedagogical possibilities offered by a professional theatre building designed specifically for children. Children's geographer Owain Jones uses the concept of “polymorphic spaces” (2002) to describe children's active agency in using and adapting spaces created by adults. Drawing on Jones' work, I argue for a phenomenology of TEY theatre-going that re-considers the hierarchies of time, space and experience from the perspective of the young children involved in this research. A consideration of the experience of leaving the familiar nursery routine to visit the theatre, I conclude, may be enriched by viewing performance as only a part of the fluidity of the entire theatre event. ‘The audience wants a job to do: they want to be allowed to fill in some gaps in their understanding of what’s happening’ (Burrows 2010, p.108): spectatorship and spectatorial connection in early years audiences Katherine Morley Based on documentation showing a propensity for ‘untutored’ infant audiences to fall still and watchful in certain performance conditions, particularly in light of pedagogical leanings toward kinaesthetic learning, this paper extrapolates early findings from an extended piece of field research based on a case study of UK touring production 16 Singers (created in partnership with Dance Umbrella/Theatre Royal Bath) for 0-18 month olds and their adults. This performance, constructed around sung-sound and the choreographed body, supports questions concerning breath, reception and physicalisation of sound, and participation, proposing a new definition of spectatorship in a TEY context. Since the early 1980s, when companies like Oily Cart (UK), Helios (Germany) and La Baracca (Italy) began creating [music-led] performance work for nursery-aged children, there has been a slowly growing number of academic publications in this sector (Schneider 2009; Goldfinger 2011; Fletcher-Watson 2014). In the UK, cultural venues like the egg at Theatre Royal Bath and Polka, London have assisted in assuring sector growth through programming, industry advocacy and by nurturing artist-researchers to develop a body of new work to sit alongside that of their colleagues in Europe, Scandinavia and the US. This paper draws on an imbricated praxis (Nelson 2010) to generate, test and explore theories of how and what early years audiences are drawn to watch in performance. Focusing on the proxemic conditions that allow infants to become spectatorially engaged, immersed perhaps (White 2013), and able to respond gesturally and vocally without parental interpolation or physicalisation, the paper will challenge prevalent norms of early years practice, which tend to privilege sensory-driven/physically-active forms of participation. Applied and Social Theatre – Abstracts and biogs Ben Fletcher-Watson holds a PhD in drama from the Royal Conservatoire of Scotland and the University of St Andrews. His research examines contemporary Scottish practice in theatre for early years. He has published articles in journals including Youth Theatre Journal and Research in Drama Education. He serves on the Executive of the Theatre and Performance Research Association (TaPRA) and is an ASSITEJ Next Generation Artist. Emma Miles is in the third year of a PhD at Royal Holloway, University of London, supervised by Professor Helen Nicholson. Her research centres around an empirical study of theatre with a group of nursery-aged children, where she is interested in the experiential and pedagogical implications of the TEY event. Previously, she worked as a primary school teacher specialising in early literacy learning. Emma recently completed a Creativeworks Researcher-in-Residence scheme with Punchdrunk Enrichment, producing a report on their theatre work in primary schools. Katherine Morley is an associate artist at the egg Theatre Royal, Bath and an AHRC and President’s doctoral scholar at the University of Manchester. She is currently researching spectatorship and the significance of music in Theatre for Early Years. Katherine was creative learning artist in residence at Dundee Rep and University of Aberdeen (School of Education) from 2013-14. In 2014, she received a Leverhulme scholarship to develop work for infant audiences, creating 16 Singers (co-produced by ‘egg’ and Dance Umbrella, and nominated for a 2015 Family Arts Award). Katherine recently presented research at the 2016 UK conferences of LEYMN and TYA-ASSITEJ.