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TYA and Perceptions of the Contemporary Child May 28, 2014, Warsaw Poland 1:30-3:30 Seminar I Facilitator: Geesche Wartemann, University of Hildesheim Dr Tom Maguire University of Ulster [email protected] Regulation, research and the creative gap: the context and practice of TYA in contemporary Northern Ireland A significant legacy of the period of violent conflict in Northern Ireland and the subsequent peace process is that children and childhood have been the focus of much academic research. This research has been focused largely on concerns about the reproduction of sectarianism by children and its impact on them, particularly through schooling and the influence of the media (Connolly and Maginn 1999; Ewart, Schubotz et al 2004; Messenger Davies 2006; Young NCB Northern Ireland 2013). There has been almost no equivalent research into children's engagement with the arts in general and theatre specifically, even within the narrow focus of how they might contribute to a society free from sectarianism. Since 2008, an annual Kids Life and Times Survey, for example, has gathered children's experiences of childhood. None of its questions address children's experience of the arts or live theatre. A new Children’s Research Network for Ireland and Northern Ireland was established in 2012. While hitherto engaged in methodological concerns of research into children, in December 2013, its conference will focus on children's mental health and wellbeing, However, the measures of well-being (such as the Laeken Indicators used by the European Union) focus exclusively on factors relating to poverty such as income, unemployment and access to housing. Access to the arts is not mentioned at all. Alongside these gaps in research, both the UK government and Northern Ireland's devolved Assembly have made significant interventions in the legislative structures that regulate childhood, including in the areas of Children's Rights, through the appointment of a Children's Commissioner; in Child Protection; and in proposed changes to the schooling structure. Again, there is a focus here on protecting children from harm, discrimination and social exclusion in line with The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. However, Article 31 of the convention that specifies that, 'Children have the right to relax and play, and to join in a wide range of cultural, artistic and other recreational activities' is rarely mentioned in any legal structure or social care provision. Such research and regulation suggest that in Northern Ireland children are the focus of anxiety and that childhood is perceived as fraught with dangers. These are, then a continuation in these different spheres of the recurrent motifs noted by Gilligan (2008) in the representations of children that focus on hope, innocence and above all else vulnerability. In the same period, within a growing sector of performances for young audiences, TYA productions generated from within Northern Ireland have only engaged intermittently with these issues (though there have been a plethora of participatory projects in applied theatre). Instead, performances have largely focused on celebrating children's resilience and developing the imaginative engagement of spectators with performance. This paper explores the reasons for the gap between the research and regulatory context and the artistic practice of Northern Ireland's TYA artists. It argues that this creative practice is filling the gaps left by research and regulation. The creativity of this practice eschews instrumentalist approaches to making performance, yet, paradoxically, may also be directly engaging with the development of the kinds of experiences that will build a shared future for Northern Ireland's citizens. ************************************************************************************ Dr. Stephani Etheridge Woodson Arizona State University [email protected] Building Third Space in US Theatre for Youth Theatre for Young Audiences is an inherently conservative field in the United States drawing heavily from educational practices as well as performance traditions. Much of the literature and research in theatre for youth pulls from one of two dominant streams: 1. Work exploring theories, concerns and questions of presentation to young people—children as audience; and 2. Work revolving around theatre education and social theories, concerns and questions—children as learners. Even work that emphasizes children and youth as performers tends to privilege the benefits accrued to the individual child because of and/or through engagement with mimesis. In no other theatre practice is the primary audience as distant from the production processes as in US TYA. Few professional theatre for youth companies even have child/youth advisory boards, let alone child playwrights, directors, designers and performers. Economically, children and youth rarely purchase their own tickets to theatre shows. Contextually, US America is the only United Nation member nation— with the exception of Somalia—not signed onto the UN Declaration on the Rights of the Child—we literally do not guarantee young people’s right to culture in the United States. At the policy level we have a schizophrenic relationship to children and youth legally based in property rights or future economic status above collective freedoms. In addition, as a culture we are uncomfortable with children’s entertainment for the sake of entertainment—art for fun, or what James Thompson (2009: 9) would call the “affective range.” Children’s art (television, film, theatre, music) is expected to inform and educate and only secondarily to entertain. Expanding the “children/youth as audience” and “children/youth as learners” US literature, this paper offers children/youth as citizens/publics and children/youth as community/civic assets. Encompassing an expanded model of “childhood” and “youth,” facilitation and relational strategies, and a particular focus on how art functions in public environments (defined broadly), my shorthand label for the practices explored in this paper is TYA third space. My use of the term, TYA third space—even offhandedly— depends heavily on the scholarship of Homi Bhabha (1990, 2004), and an understanding of cultural processes and performances as what political theorist Harry Boyte calls “free-space.” My use of the term “third space” weaves these strands together to: Redefine the cultural capacity of children and youth Build field theory grounded in positive youth development; deliberative democratic principles and the politics of recognition; and community cultural development I argue for TYA practices intervening in the politics of human interaction and sociality and understand action in terms of social power; not in order to TEACH democratic principles to individual children and youth—as did early 20th century US progressive—but rather to PARTICIPATE in democratic processes as collective publics. In particular, this paper roots in Hannah Arendt’s term “web of relations” along with sociologist David Studdert’s 2005 text, Conceptualizing Community: Beyond the State and the Individual to argue for de-centered understandings of identity at odds with the traditional theory of US American Exceptionalism and the cult of rugged individualism built into US American conceptualizations of Theatre for Youth. ************************************************************************************ Chaekyung Lee Theater Troupe Georipae/ Korean Center of ASSITEJ [email protected] Theatre as a Play Theatre is originally a play. According to Johan Huizinga’s classical book, <Homo Ludens>, play requires structure and participants who're willing to create within limits. Then there comes two requirements; rules and participants. In terms of theatre, we are quickly losing our participants to other kinds of fancy rules; internet, TVs, movies, etc.. I would say that the biggest rival is smartphones; its effect is incomparable with other mediums as nothing can be as close to people as smarphones. We keep them everywhere. They’re also all in one toy. The strength of smartphones is its virtual reality. After experiencing falshy virtual realities, the real world seems too dull. The palm-sized screen seems more realistic than the actual theatre with live actors. Then what should we do to regain our participants? I suggest making ‘participants’ actual ‘participants’. Amongst Aristotle’s 3 elements of theatre-plot, characters, spectacle-, people watch well made soap opera with delicate plot everyday on TV, and watch unimaginable spectacle through movies. What’s left of us is people. To make this dull-looking reality real, we have to seduce children to make theatres, so that they can feel the joy of it by themselves. I’d like to suggest a case study of Bandal. Bandal is a regional children’s musical theater company made by Miryang Theater Village. Miryang is a conservative city in the suburban area. At first, Miryang citizens were against making Miryang Theater Village, and Bandal was one of theater makers’ effort to seduce Miryang citizens to their part. It turned out to be a great success. At first, children were shy and clumsy, but they soon become real actors. It’s been 13 years since Bandal was founded, and Bandal has made its own system automatically- senior members training junior members. It’s almost like a real troupe system. They care for the quality of their performances, not just for themselves. Some of the earlier cycliers, who went already to University, sometimes come down to Miryang to teach their juniors. Bandal has won various kinds of awards at theater festivals, and has become Miryang’s treasure. What's unique about Bandal is the way children started adopting technology to theatre. Once the theatre making has become important to their lives, they’ve started using smartphones for theatres. They share scripts and scores with smartphones, they play music for theatres with smartphones, and they communicate with smartphones and share files with smartphones when they’re back home. For them, this theatre community is real. For children to feel theatre is real, we’ve got to make them feel real, and do real. Once children participate in the theatre, they instantly become huge fans of theatre. The earlier children experience it, the better it is. Theatre is the most humane activity in this technology oriented society. We should regain our playing culture, regardless of in and out of theatre space. that’s what I suggest through this paper. ************************************************************************************ Associate Professor Sandra Gattenhof Queensland University of Technology Creative Industries Faculty – Drama email: [email protected] More than just audiences: young people, participation and theatre in the digital age For some audience members the art is secondary to engaging in a live and social experience. As a report, now over ten years old, titled Australia Council Framework for Youth and the Arts identified: “As consumers of art and culture, young people are as diverse as other sectors of the Australian community. They participate in popular, contemporary and traditional arts and culture, both eagerly and reluctantly, and anywhere in between” (1999; pp. 17‐18). Research shows that the current generation ‐ generation Z, millenials, generation next – are the most technologically enabled generation of young people ever to live on the planet. They have never known life without the web, social networking sites, online gaming and yet they are the most socially isolated and lonely generation ever. They are connected through Facebook, Twitter, Tweetdeck, Tumblr, Instagram and many other social networking sites as they share their life experiences with each other live, but in a virtual space. The term ‘screenager’ was coined fifteen years ago by the author Douglas Rushkoff in his book Playing the Future (1999). He used the term to refer to young people reared from infancy on a diet of TV, computers and other digital devices. ‘Screenager’, like the term ‘digital natives’ (Prensky, 2001), denotes the first generation that has never known a world without the internet, and access to digital devices. As a result of this ubiquitous technology-infused environment today’s children and young people think and process information fundamentally differently from their predecessors. This change has implications theatre participation young people. Theatre engages young people in a way that television, tablets and smartphones never quite can. Perhaps this is because it is a live, communal experience that is quite unlike anything else. This paper will investigate the idea of liveness and how theatre for young audiences can help to redress what Australian social commentator Hugh Mackay has called a "new form of RSI ‐ Reduced Social Interaction syndrome" (Mackay in Griffin, 2011) caused by the lack of the "emotional nutrition" of spending time face to face with others. The paper will take the position that the live performing arts have a role in developing social cohesion and wellbeing for generation Y and generation Z, our lonely generations. The discussion will be anchored around two theatre festivals held annually in Brisbane, Australia and an analysis 40 performances for and by young people that showed 46% of the productions explored issues around belonging, connectivity with people and conversely being disconnected from people and human relationships. Live performance as a social event is of course not a new phenomena. But given the research about this current generation and their experience of loneliness, perhaps it is time theatre-makers and performance venues investigate how they might ramp up the live and analogue experience to contribute to social cohesion and wellbeing. I believe young people crave the live experience because a good deal of their life is now played out online. Humans are social creatures and require human contact but the digital age has caused a seismic shift in how we experience life and engage with others. Engagement in live arts events facilitate, for our young people, real time, faceto-face interaction thereby reducing the possibility of Reduced Social Interaction syndrome. For this reason I believe the live performing arts and arts venues maybe able to provide new platforms for young people’s social cohesion and wellbeing, now and into the future. ************************************************************************************ Lorenzo Garcia University of North Texas [email protected] Theatre for and with Children in North Texas: The Valuing of Community Memory in the Face of Power How to bring the voices of the excluded into a discussion of history is what brings this discussion to cultural production aimed at Latina/o children at this portentous moment when we in North Texas are debating the fate of millions of undocumented immigrants in our midst. What theatre practices are utilized with child participants and audiences to convey solidarity or belonging to a greater collective? What are the lessons learned about injustice and then passed on within communities and families through culturally rooted cuentos (stories) describing dreams and rupture, as well as terror and triumph? What role(s) are children supposed to play in the struggle for social justice and in the critique of systems of domination? Although there are multiple ways of expressing sentiments of community and belonging, I direct attention to the production Searching for the Six Flags of Texas (Searching) aimed at children that acknowledges the necessity of struggling with the intricacies of a highly mythologized Texas history and that engages children through an interactive theatre experience in which they are asked to participate. So goes the task of valuing community memory that reveals previously occluded experiences but also frames those experiences from the perspectives of subjects previously relegated to silence and passivity. Little has been written that would place plays for children alongside cultural revitalization projects. In this article, I follow the analytical lead offered by Delores Delgado Bernal who employs the term “community memory” as an effort to recover the hidden voices of Latina/o children thought long subdued and put out of sight. While the reworking of ascribed identity formations has been the business of many across time in North Texas, I argue that Searching may be seen to correspond with efforts of valuing community memory—that is, of symbolically connecting to various economies, temporalities and spaces as a means of giving youth the ideas and images to expand their sense of community, inclusion, and belonging. In a very important way, the production Searching became embroiled in a history of marginalization that puts Latina/o youth in a subordinate position and within thinking that views them as the perpetual foreigner. By extension, the “child” is a contested analytical term circulating in this production at once evocative of potential and of the vulnerability of the body politic. ************************************************************************************ Dr Dominic Hingorani University of East London e-mail: [email protected] Performing Difference: Ethnicity, ‘Race’ and Representation in TYA. As an academic at the University of East London based in the London borough of Newham one of the most ethnically diverse populations in the UK in which over fifty percent of the population belong to an ethnic group other than white and has a higher than national proportion of young people places the performance of ‘difference’ centre stage in TYA. This paper will examine how TYA responds to the realties of a diverse young audience in relation to ethnicity and ‘race’ and in doing so not only addresses issues of representation, authenticity and marginalization but also recognizes how this engagement will not only lead to new audiences for TYA but can also lead to innovation in practice and form and inscribe ‘difference’ into TYA. The imbalance in engagement with the arts predicated on ethnicity has been recognized by Arts Council England whose report ‘Encourage children today to build audiences for tomorrow’ stated ‘girls and white children are more likely to receive encouragement than boys and children who are not white’ (2009). Indeed, to frame this discussion historically it was 1976 when Naseem Kahn’s ground breaking report ‘The Arts Britain Ignores’ for the first time officially recognized that ‘ethnic arts’ should not be regarded as an exotic extra outside of British theatre but should be understood, funded and fostered as though they were part of British theatre. In the contemporary moment the continuing imperative for TYA to actively address and engage with the issue of diversity is clearly spelled out in the McMasters report which was asked to consider how public subsidy may best support excellence in the arts. The report highlighted the fact the fact that in the UK while we ‘live in one of the most diverse societies the world has ever seen, yet that is not reflected in the culture we produce, or in who is producing it’ (2008:11). I will discuss some of the key initiatives, strategies and performance practices through which the TYA sector has attempted to address representation over that time including casting initiatives, performance praxis, and new writing in the attempt to engage with diverse new audiences. This paper will contest notions of margin and ‘centre’ and the central thrust of my argument is that if we engage theatrically with diversity it will not only inscribe ‘difference’ on the stages of TYA but also contest homogeneous constructions of national identity and performatively attempt to ‘disturb those ideological manoeuvres through which “imagined communities” are given essentialist identities. (Bhabha, 1994: 149) Seminar II Facilitator: Tulin Saglam, University of Ankara Miranda Giles Arizona State University [email protected] What We Have in Common Core: Performing cultural anxieties and cultural difference in Arizona State University’s There Was and There Wasn’t. Beginning in 2014 over ninety percent of states in the U.S. will implement the new Common Core standards of education. Renamed in Arizona as College and Career Ready Standards, this evaluation and assessment system is proudly touted as having been developed in partnership with “business and community leaders” so as to give students the tools they need to succeed in a “rapidly changing, globalized world.” Scattered throughout the Language Arts standards is the mandate that students should explore and actively seek to understand the stories myths, and traditional literature of other cultures. Specifically these standards ask that students “recount stories” and “determine their central message” or “compare and contrast” stories in search of universal truths. These, and the similar standards permeating curriculum in recent decades, speak to American’s dread of being labeled bigoted or uncultured. Publishing these standards, their primary authors, the leaders of American education policy, expose their own anxieties about exploring cultural diversity while ignoring student’s own cultural differences. Rather, they favor the easier assumption of cultural hegemony with in the classroom. This anxiety may also be manifest in local elementary school teachers, of whom in 2011 eighty-four percent were white females, and most of whom were unlikely to have work or educational experience outside their chosen field. Complicating these assumptions is the recent insistence that adhering to these standards will create students who are educationally prepared to compete with their international counterparts for economic dominance in an increasingly globalized economy. The conflation of the other as the economic adversary risks reducing cultural exploration to the adage of knowing your enemy. With a missionary zeal, teaching artists eager to locate arts in the American classroom develop myriad offerings addressing cultural difference. Teaching artists can use the promise of addressing Core standards, particularly those that may fall outside the average teacher’s comfort zone, as a calling card to gain access to student’s precious education time and space, and even funds. As a case study of these struggles, I will examine my own work in 2013 on the original production There Was and There Wasn’t, developed as part of a course with my fellow Theatre for Youth graduate students at Arizona State University. Touring to several Phoenix area primary schools, the play was solicited to school administrators, and eagerly accepted, as addressing the cultural diversity requirements in the Arizona education standards. Despite positive educational and artistic intentions, the reality of what we delivered to students was quite different. There Was and There Wasn’t featured four markedly un-diverse performers presented folktales appropriated from distant lands. These tales had been told and retold, translated and retranslated, and finally adapted for the stage until they existed only in tidy English with clear plot correlations to popular Disneyfied fairy tales like Cinderella and Mulan. By telling the coming of age stories of young people in places and times far removed from the audience the production supported positivist notions that the other is accessible because really, he’s a lot like me, and worked on the assumption that me is the voice of the creative hegemony. This production failed to do more than wink at actual cultural difference, and instead illuminated the familiar cultural anxiety of its privileged creators and missed an opportunity to develop new definitions and methods for examining cultural difference with young people. *********************************************************************************** Paulo Merisio CBTIJ / UNIRIO (Capes; CNPq; FAPERJ) / Trupe de Truões – Brasil [email protected] Breaking some eggs: experiences of reception in theatre for children in Brazil In the parable “Mulberry Omelet”, Walter Benjamin tells the story of a king who wished to experience once again the flavor of an omelet that he had eaten in his childhood, which was made by an old woman who sheltered him, and his father, when they were running away from the enemy troops. If the cook accomplished the recipe, he would become the king’s son-in-law, but if he failed, he would be sentenced to death. The cook, then, put his head at his majesty’s service. He alleged to know all the secrets of the recipe, but to be incapable of delivering the flavor of the experience: “Despite all my efforts, my omelet would not taste right to you. For how could I spice it on that occasion: the dangers of battle, the vigilance of the pursued, the warmth of the hearth and the sweetness of rest, the strange surroundings of the dark future?” This image always comes back when I devote myself to analyze practices of contemporary theatre for children. It is common in Brazil, in places that propose to debate a certain play staged priority to children, to identify some kind of anachronism in the appraisals. In times that we begin to relativize the post dramatic theatre theories, great portion of the discussions on theatre for this segment has a tendency to be grounded in old paradigms. Concepts such as collaborative work, acting, polysemy and hybridity of languages seem to be reserved to a “more sophisticated” theatre, directed to adults, as difficult to be understood by children. Therefore, the little ones are, usually, faced as “future” audience and only receivers of information, far away from a perspective which considers them fundamental agents in the relationship expected between stage and audience. Parallel to this sort of “time tunnel” of concepts connected to the theatre, there are still some productions that have a tendency to build a wall between the universe of children and adults, as if the children audience were living isolated in Rapunzel’s tower, disconnected to the facts surrounding them, protected from subjects considered complicated. This work has the main goal to investigate aspects of reception in children’s theater nowadays, having as a reference the play Simbá, o marujo (Simbad, the sailor) (Trupe de Truões, 2008), which made, in 2013, a tour among 20 states in Brazil, with workshops, presentations and debates, therefore nourishing the troupe with innumerous issues concerning reception. The text was built in collaborative process, stimulated through theater games, and has in its conception the desire to dialogue with some concepts of the theatre so called contemporary, here outlined. The group believes that, as in the same way in the scene for adults, the interpretation of a play for children can be made in a polysemic and varied way, according to aspects such as age, background formation and social context. And it has as a desire, from the stimulation to engage in the proposed scenic game, to build some “mulberry omelets” for its audience. *********************************************************************************** J. Andrew “Andy” Wiginton, ABD MFA PhD Candidate, The University of Wisconsin-Madison Adjunct Professor, Drew University, Madison, New Jersey Program Director, Savvy Theatre Works [email protected] Revolutionary Children in the Audience: The perception of children in contemporary Mexican TYA At a 2014 ITYARN seminar session of the XVIIIth ASSITEJ World Congress, I would like to share the proposed paper, “Revolutionary Children in the Audience: The perception of children in contemporary Mexican TYA.” In the paper I communicate findings that illustrate how a “revolutionary ideology” continues to shape and define the majority of contemporary theatre for young audiences1 in México City, which in turn creates an idealized adult perception of the “revolutionary child.” Presently I am completing a larger work that chronicles the history of theatre 1 The definition of theatre for young audiences in México is complicated and will be defined in more detail in the full paper. However, for purposes of the proposal, theatre for young audiences (TYA) is defined as professional or amateur theatre made or facilitated by adults for children and young people (ages 5-18). for youth in México City immediately before, during and after the Mexican Revolution of 1910. The larger study compares pre-‐ and post-‐revolution themes and aesthetics performed for youth in the context of the particular ideological concerns about children, childhood, and performance in the historical moment. I argue that in the aftermath of the Revolution of 1910, adults sought to create a privileged singular “revolutionary” ideology that was imparted to children through an explosion of educational and cultural activities, including TYA. Cultural scholar Beatriz Urías Horcasitas argues from 1910 to 1960, this “ideological change” swept the nation towards a “revolutionary” ideology that came to define the “scopes of education and culture that are still seen today” (Cepeda 27). Through and examination of general themes and aesthetics seen today in TYA as well as those present in the revolutionary period, I will illustrate how “The Revolution” and a “revolutionary ideology” are pervasive in contemporary Mexican TYA. When taken together with a comparison of the stated “educational goals” of the historical form to similarly stated objectives present in contemporary Mexican discourse by those involved in the making and financing of Mexican TYA presently; the predominant perception of the Mexican child in the audience is made plain. This idealized, “revolutionary” child (should) superlatively champion the principles gleaned from the revolutionary period. David Kennedy argues “adults tend to believe implicitly in the universality of childhood” (8). In México, this “universal” perception of an “idealized revolutionary child” raises many questions about the very nature of the field of Mexican TYA that will guide the paper. First, what is the nature of the adult-child relationship in México and how does it operate in TYA? Does this “universal” perception create aesthetic and thematic limits on contemporary TYA? If so, how? What structures are in place to uphold/enforce this perception? What happens when the revolutionary ideals that created the perception in the first place are no longer relevant to the contemporary real-time lived experience of Mexican children and youth? Finally, what might all of this suggest about the future of TYA in México generally? *********************************************************************************** Teresa Marrero Associate Professor of Latin American and Latino/a Theatre Department of World Languages, Literatures and Cultures College of Arts and Sciences, University of North Texas, Denton, Texas, USA [email protected] Foreign yet Familiar Topography: Mariachi Girl and Latina/o TYA At the annual American Society for Theatre Research Conference in November 2013 held in Dallas, Texas (U.S.) –a predominantly Mexican and Mexican American state and city—two firsts occurred: the inclusion of Hispanic theatre companies at the Plenary session dedicated to the local Latino/a theatre and a dramatic reading of the Latina TYA musical play Mariachi Girl, by University of Texas at Austin professor Roxanne Schroeder-Arce. The reading took place with students from the theatre department at the University of North Texas (Denton, TX) led by professor Lorenzo Garcia in conjunction with Robyn Flatt, founder and artistic director of the Dallas Children’s Theater Center (DCT), one of the oldest theatres in the area. I was happy to have brokered both events as a member and co-facilitator (with Garcia) for the Teatro Alianza of North Texas Organizations (TANTO). As such, this event marks my entrance into what I call a foreign yet familiar terrain. What is foreign about TYA is how little I know about it, in spite of the fact that I have been a scholar of Latino/a theatre since the late 1980s, and was personally mentored by one of Latino TYA playwrights/directors most seminal figure, José Cruz González, during the early stages of his career. TYA has remained absent from my scholarly radar and from the overall Latino/a theatre historiographies. Considering writing about Mariachi Girl has brought me face to face with issues of representation, erasures, and historiographic documentation within Latino/a theatre in general. In an essay entitled “Under the Radar, Hispanic Theater in North Texas,” writing for a global audience, I challenge the notion of the almost obligatory introduction to most critical work on Latino/a writing: Sisyphus’s task (of which I have been a part) of attempting to demarcate, fix, create defining discourses about Latino/a identity. In that essay, I pose the following line of questioning: if critical inquiry of American (meaning US) theatre works do not systematically begin with attempted definitions of what an American play is, given that it too is quite hybrid, why must we, the socalled ‘Others,’ do so? Who needs these definitions and what purpose do they serve? To what degree do we, Latino/a scholars, play into this type of cultural apartheid? Roxanne Schroeder-Arce provides an interesting case, since she has grappled with these issues and wears several hats: she is a scholar, a creative writer, and director. She is also a musician, an Anglo, Spanish-speaking woman with a Hispanic spouse, and mother of a young girl. In Mariachi Girl two important themes are highlighted: traditions that do not evolve die and little girls can aspire to be anything they would like to be. Cita, short for Carmencita, wants to follow her father’s footsteps as a Mariachi singer and musician; her father forbids it because it goes against the patriarchal family tradition. This presentation will examine the playwright’s scholarship in TYA, notions of gender and identity within the Mexican musical tradition of mariachi performance, and ways in which these intersect and generate new avenues of inquiry in theatre histories in general. *********************************************************************************** Gillian McNally Associate Professor of Theatre Education Head of Community Engagement and Programs for Youth University of Northern Colorado [email protected] Dr. Mary Schuttler Professor, Theatre Education University of Northern Colorado [email protected] Finding Equal Ground: The Marginalization of TYA in a University Setting In this paper, the authors will use the production of Steven Dietz’s play Jackie and Me as a case study on how to shift the perception of TYA from marginal to mainstream in the eyes of the faculty and students in the theatre department at the University of Northern Colorado (UNC). “As Peggy McIntosh describes it, privilege exists when one group has something of value that is denied to others simply because of the groups they belong to, rather than because of anything they’ve done or failed to do” (Johnson 23). If TYA artists dedicate the same time, energy and artistry to a production, why is their work often seen as substandard? Last year, at the end of a successful production of A Year with Frog and Toad, a graduating senior in the acting program reflected that people felt sorry for him because he was “just cast in the children’s show.” Many other students in the TYA course had similar experiences and passionately fought against these misperceptions and wanted to know why this production had a low status in the department how they could advocate for more support for TYA productions in the future. Two theatre professors at UNC, a prestigious pre-professional university training program, have worked tirelessly to elevate the level of support and respect given to the annual TYA production. In this paper, we will describe the efforts made to elevate the status of TYA in a university program. Through focus group conversations and surveys with students and faculty from all theatre disciplines, we will investigate: 1. What are the perceptions of TYA in this university setting? 2. Why do people have these assumptions? 3. Why is theatre for young audiences often marginalized? 4. How can professionals in the TYA field be better advocates for the quality and importance of this work? In an effort to raise the status of TYA in the UNC theatre program, Schuttler and McNally chose Steven Dietz’s TYA play, Jackie and Me. This will be the first time that a TYA play will have a fully mounted production on the mainstage at UNC. Additionally, Steven Dietz, a famous playwright for both adults and young people, will come to UNC to conduct master classes and see the production. Schuttler and McNally wonder if there will be a perception shift in the theatre department due to the performance space and visiting playwright. Schuttler will direct Jackie and Me and track the thoughts of students involved in the production. McNally will interview students from other disciplines to measure the impact of this mainstage production. Children are marginalized as citizens in the US, and therefore, often the work for young people is marginalized. To analyze this marginalization, the authors will look at the more global impact of how privilege, power, oppression and adultism factor into the marginalization of TYA. How can academics work collaboratively with students to elevate the status of TYA to benefit the contemporary audience of young people? ************************************************************************************ Aracelia Guerrero Rodríguez Assitej Mexico [email protected] Experiencing Theater in Violent Neighborhoods As part of creative process aimed at putting on a performance where a group of girls, boys and teenagers could talk about childhood with an adult audience, throughout a three-year period I held theater workshops with young inhabitants of the downtown area of Mexico City specifically of the historical neighborhoods of Tepito and La Lagunilla. The objective was to collect testimonies regarding how vulnerable sectors of the population experience childhood. Undoubtedly for this kids childhood is a laboratory on the exercise of power where the strongest leader tends to humiliate others most. Nonetheless, in spite of adverse conditions, children might find an ally in theater that can help them understand these violent acts from other perspectives. To disarticulate violence, it is necessary to know where it originates as well as the social and individual mechanisms and tools that perpetuate violence. Each child who has used theater to explore and come to an understanding that it is possible to find other forms of relationship can become an agent of change in relation to their own experience. It is necessary to stop taking ownership of theories that refer to bullying as a contemporary phenomenon applying a moralizing discourse in which violent children are directly blamed for being the origin of the problem, thus punishing the consequences without looking at the causes. To prevent and eradicate these forms of violence against children, we must spell out exactly what machism, sexism, homophobia and racism mean as underpinnings of a core part of our culture: the real causes of violence and mistreatment. For kids who lack a family structure and a place in which they are respected and listened to, theater can be both family and reference. Theater is a highly meaningful life exercise that allows a glance into other possible realities, but also requires firmness, studying and constancy in order to actually be able to have an impact on change. *********************************************************************************** Marina Petković Liker, assistant lecturer Academy of Dramatic Art, University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia e-mail: [email protected] Iva Gruić, PhD, senior lecturer Faculty of Teacher Education, University of Zagreb Zagreb, Croatia e-mail: [email protected] Children’s Reception of a High-Pitched Voice of Reduced Expressive Power in Theatre In TYA actors often create their characters by means of a particular vocal performance, whereby they depart from their chest register and an appropriate resonance, from what is usually considered pleasant voice. Instead, they opt for a high pitched, even squeaky voice of reduced expressive power. Such choice of vocal performance is unexpected at first sight, since high-pitched and squeaky voices are frequently evaluated as relatively unpleasant, while reduced expressive power often results in lacking of emotional subtlety. The actors’ vocal performance is not the only aspect where the reduction of the expressive power is seen in TYA. The omnipresent paternalistic attitude leads towards all kinds of ‘protective’ simplifications, both in content and in form. And since the complexity is an important part of the aesthetic experience, many theoreticians and practitioners opt for more serious (and/or more artistic) approach towards young audience in theatre, and criticize the dominant social construct of childhood as the age of innocence with the picture of child that needs to be protected. We believe that it is not always easy to draw a line between unnecessary oversimplification and reasonable simplifications (because children have less experience and know less about life and theatre). So, we address the problem of simplifications on the example of the use of the actor’s vocal performance. The investigation asks the question ho w the reduced expressive power in actor’s vocal performance influences children's perception and understanding. In order to approach the issue empirically, an experiment was developed, whereby a short story is told by the same actor in two versions: one with a modal (normal) voice, and the other with a high-pitched, squeaky voice. In order to eliminate the influence of the content of the story, we use gibberish, so that the voice becomes the major component of speech. Other aspects of performance are intentionally minimized. Each of the two versions of the story is performed for different groups of children at the age of 5 to 6 (which means that in the subsequent analysis the Saldana’s suggestions about stages of young interpretations, and Klein’s observations about developmental differences in viewing theatre are taken into consideration). During the experimental performance, the children's responses are observed, and after the performance they are interviewed about the character (who tells the story), her main characteristics and her emotions at chosen points of the experimental performance. The data is analysed in order to search for differences in children’s reception related to different uses of actor’s voice. Special emphasis is placed on questions about character’s emotions and on the analysis of differences in participants’ ‘readings’ of those emotions. Conclusions will be discussed in relation to the discussion about (over)simplification and its impact on young audiences. *********************************************************************************** Nora Lía Sormani University of Buenos Aires [email protected] The space of child spectator in theater for young audience Despite its ephemeral nature, theater for young audience does not pass without trace and invaluable contributions discipline because of an immediate and enjoyable connects the child to the world of art and opened the doors of aesthetic sensibility of reflection, the ability to get excited about, laugh and mourn and to understand different views of life and the world. Have with respect to the "adult theater" features of community and difference. That is, shared with the adult theater many elements and, in turn, has certain operating rules and codes of its own. One of these specific features is the way the theater spaces raises in theater for young audience. In my paper I will try to think of the place of the contemporary child from the notion of "theater space". As expressed Patrice Pavis, the notion of space in the theater applies to many different aspects of the text and representation. The dramatic space is the abstract space referred to the text and that the spectator should build with his imagination. The stage, however, is the real space where the actors move either in scene, an area within a room, or other unconventional spatial cut. The concept of theatrical space corresponds place which puts the audience and the actors during the performance (the theater building, street, square, etc.), sum of audience space and the space of the actors. How does this distribution of space in theater for young audiences? Are there the same spaces or they appear without limits? Do they vary these spaces as the circuit to which the work belongs? Does it arise from the aesthetic of the playwright? Do spontaneously generated from the child's behavior as a spectator? These are some of the questions that involve my paper. Seminar III Facilitator: Yvette Hardie, President Assitej Teresa Simone MFA student, Theatre for Youth Arizona State University [email protected] Hear Me, See Me: Towards a Collaborative Theatre for Deaf and Blind Youth How can theatre include deaf and/or blind audiences? How do theatre makers’ perceptions of disability impact their work? Can theatre move beyond including the disabled, towards destabilizing the notion of disability? This essay explores a series of performances made in collaboration between the Arizona School for Deaf and Blind (ASDB) and Stories That Soar (STS). ASDB educates about 200 blind and/or deaf youth ages 3-21 from throughout Arizona. STS is a Theatre for Youth (TFY) company based in Tucson, Arizona. In the STS model, a hungry, talking “Magic Box” visits a site, and invites youth to “feed” it stories. The Magic Box stays for a few weeks, collecting stories. The STS ensemble reads each story, and selects about 20 to develop into a full-length play. At the end of the process, STS returns to the site for a performance. No one knows whose stories got chosen until the show. At the end of the show, all authors are acknowledged onstage with a confetti-filled celebration. The ASDB shows are unique because they target a mixed audience of deaf, blind, and deaf and blind youth. For the ASDB project, STS employed specialists in deaf and blind education as consultants, multi-modal interpreters, and a deaf actor trained at Gallaudet University. However, all core STS ensemble are non-disabled actors, and the ASDB shows are the only work in which STS collaborates with disabled communities. This essay explores the challenges, successes, and failures in creating theatre for deaf and/or blind audiences. How did STS adapt their methodologies to suit this particular audience? Can the project serve as a model for collaboration between distinct communities? Was STS able to “face the audience” at ASDB? ************************************************************************************ Ben Fletcher-Watson The Royal Conservatoire of Scotland / University of St Andrews [email protected] The Impossible Audience? New Developments in Theatre for Unborn Children Conceptually, childhood begins with babies and toddlers, and Theatre for Early Years (TEY) has expanded enormously in the past three decades to cater for the very young. However, there is an audience who have been overlooked by theatre-makers, even those within TEY – foetuses. Performance experiences for unborn children may seem impossible, yet artists are beginning to explore the possibility of engaging with this most unlikely audience. This paper will explore recent developments in performing arts for foetuses in the UK, placing them alongside new evidence from developmental psychology, art therapy, biomedical science and in utero imaging techniques. These advances suggest that the arts can play an important role in mental health, family bonding, positive body images and good birth experiences. Traditionally, the womb was viewed as a dark, silent place, with foetuses cut off from the outside world. Improvements in fMRI imaging and biological data-capturing now permit a more nuanced understanding of both the foetal environment and their sensory capabilities. Theatrical interventions could employ light, sound, touch, taste and kinaesthetics in a rich tapestry, to which babies in the womb respond with surprising skill and delicacy. This paper examines three recent performance experiments for foetuses: Blooming Voices (Welsh National Opera, Wales 2012); Lullaby (Polka Theatre, England 2013); and Bump (Imaginate, Scotland 2013). In particular, Bump is used as a case study to scrutinize artists’ ethical, developmental and aesthetic considerations when making a performance for unborn children and their families. Performing arts for foetuses may be pushing the bounds of possibility at present, and there can be no doubt that their capabilities are extremely limited even compared with a toddler, but there is a strong case to be made for arts experiences aimed not wholly at the womb, but also at the expectant mother and father. The benefits to mental health and well-being of a calm, pleasant but stimulating environment, not to mention the social possibilities offered by participating in an event with other future parents, should not be underestimated. While foetal abilities extend to hearing, reaction to changes in temperature, pressure and light, and some physical or motor responses, their parents are fully aware of their surroundings, if not perhaps as mobile as in the first months of pregnancy. This paper aims to highlight the opportunities offered to artists, scholars and the public by the reconceptualization of the unborn as a potential audience. The challenge to medical and aesthetic orthodoxies should not be underestimated, but foetal theatre may provide a new direction for artistic creation in TEY. ************************************************************************************ HWANG Ha Young Assistant Professor in Drama/Theatre for the Young School of Drama Korea National University of Arts [email protected] Here Somewhere Far Remote: 『The Yellow Moon』 and Contemporary Korean Young Audience The impact of globalisation for the last few decades has been generating significant phenomenon in the field of contemporary theatre practice and Theatre for Young Audiences (TYA) forms part of such a phenomenon. It is observed that a growing number of TYA travels from one culture to another not only as touring productions, but also as plays produced through translations and adaptations. When Theatre for Young Audiences travel across different cultures, what are the issues arising from its encounter with the audiences who inhabit different cultural environments? Considering that TYA keeps audience at its central concern, what are the ways of finding connections with the audiences who do not have the same relationship to the culture from which the TYA comes? This paper attempts to look into these questions through 『The Yellow Moon』 produced in Seoul in 2012 and 2013. 『The Yellow Moon』, a play written by a Scottish playwright David Greig in 2006, centres around two teenagers on the run, which entails their dramatic journey from a small Scottish town called Inverkeithing up to the Highlands. It was produced by Korea National University of Arts in 2012 and the National Theatre Company of Korea in 2013, both directed by a British director Tony Graham. The play was translated from English to Korean and, while it was not an adaptation, it pertained to the scope of translation of the play both as a text and a culture. It was particularly because the play generates rich cultural references through the images of the characters, the landscapes and the banal reality of daily living that the characters portray and thus the theatrical world suggested by the play is predicated on the complex workings of such cultural references. In this context, to what extent can the production stay faithful to the original and to what degree can it accustom itself to the targeting culture? Also, for what purposes are such choices made? In the process of preparing to meet contemporary Korean young audience, the productions generated interesting points of observations and discussions. The productions of 『The Yellow Moon』 attend to certain principles of translating and directing as it straddles two different cultures, which involves creating an ‘ambiguous’ space that the audiences are invited to inhabit. By carefully leaving visible the chasm between the original and the targeting culture, the translation attempts to create a vague space in which such a chasm can work as a creative impetus for the audiences to imagine a world that is far from where they live. The directorial choices are also predicated on creating theatrical presence that the actors can embody through their speech/actions on minimalistic stage. By looking at how such an ‘ambiguous’ space created through these principles allow an imaginative space to be expanded in the audiences’ theatrical encounters, this paper attempts to examine how the audiences may come to actively inhabit and experience somewhere far remote in their very Here and Now. It also discusses the implications of such a cultural crossing in contemporary TYA and its relationship with contemporary young audience. ************************************************************************************ Anastasia Kolesnikova Saratov Academic Kiselev Youth Theater, Russia (international cooperation and literature departments) [email protected] The Story of an Experiment: International Collaboration in Theater for the Very Young Greetings! Being a beginner researcher in the field of Theater for Young Audiences (before I have studied playwrighting and Russian language and literature) I’m presenting a report about one particular project that consists mostly from observations rather than theory. I’m working in the Saratov Academic Kiselev Youth Theater (Russia) and during last three years our theater had a unique collaboration project with tjg.Theater Junge Generation from Dresden (Germany) dedicated to the theater for the very little spectators. The project was funded by the German Federal Cultural Foundation (Wanderlust Fund). In frames of the project exchange tours, workshops and master-classes were held with the participation of both Russian and German theater’s actors, the focus of the project was the perception of art by children from 2 years old. In conclusion a new production for the very little spectators appeared in both theaters’ repertoires — “… and all the stars above us”. The performance tells stories of time between day and night, when we’re not fully awake but not yet asleep, it appeals to the little audience by trying to present them the feelings and mysteries everyone is familiar with – the secrets that twilight holds. It was staged by the Russian-German creative team: director – Ania Michaelis, production-designer – Mikhail Gavrushov, video – Andrey Lapshin, composer – Bernd Sikora, dramaturg – Dagmar Domrös, educator – Bettina Seiler. This performance is a very interesting theater experiment where music, visual metaphors, and interactive acting were combined to create a special world rather than to tell a special story. The goal of the collaboration of two theaters was the development of new universal theatre language and aesthetic principles for spectators from two years old. And during this project a very interesting dialogue of post dramatic and Russian psychological theater traditions took place and my report will focus on the results of this dialogue seen in the performance “… and all the stars above us”. I’m observing it from different perspectives — stage and costumes design, working with poetical concept and using actors’ own memories of their childhood as a dramatic material and of course type of acting and interaction with the audience. I’m only beginning my research; in October 2013 my first article about this project was presented on the “Art and Authorities” conference in Saratov. Very interesting interviews and workshops videos were taken during the project, so I was able to base my observations both on the performance itself and also on the backstage activities. During this project I’ve learned about tjg.Theater Junge Generation and other European theater approach towards education in theater and drama methods in education. The ideas this approach is based on are unheard of in Russia and this performance became a first step for Saratov Youth Theater into a completely new territory just like this show is for its little spectators — for most of them it’s their first time in the theater. In future I’m planning to continue this research as a post-graduate student to get Russian theaters acquainted with new concept of cooperation between theater and education. ************************************************************************************ Mary McAvoy Instructor Roosevelt University Love rock revolution girl style now: Pussy Riot and Riot Grrl as Performative Girl Resistance “When she talks, I hear the revolution In her hips, there's revolutions When she walks, the revolution's coming In her kiss, I taste the revolution” -Bikini Kill: “Rebel Girl” In this trans-historic and trans-cultural study, I examine punk performance as an embodied radical feminist youth culture, exploring how the young performative body engages in radical reinterpretations of the world via music performance and opens new spaces for young women, from Riot Grrrls to Pussy Riot, to challenge structures of dominance even within often-hypermasculine paradigms of punk. I draw on theories of the theatrical and political avant-gardes to suggest that punk performance is both inherently theatrical and grounded in the tradition of radical resistance. Using this discussion about punk as a performed and embodied resistance, I turn my analysis to youth culture with a particular focus on young women in the United States and Russia in order to examine how punk reflects young women’s political and ideological negotiations of an otherwise adult-centered world. I argue that punk, with its do-it-yourself spirit and unapologetic rejection of objectivism and “civilized blandness” functions as important, if not vital, role in many young women’s lives as they carve out space for themselves as members of a society. By virtue of the way in which young artists create punk for similarly young spectators, the genre carves out a unique space for young people to respond to the world and the dominant adult ideologies privileged within in an atypical context as compared with other youth theatre performance paradigms. In most other instances of youth theatre, adult actors, directors, and producers create and perform theatre for young people, producing a theatre that excludes the intended audience from the process of creation. In instances where youth perform for themselves, or create their own theatre in the form of youth theatre classes or school performance ensembles, adults function as artistic advisors in the form of teachers, directors, or club supervisors. Most often, these adult roles impose a level of censorship on the young performers’ artistic expression due to their connection to disciplining institutions of school, church, and home, resulting in performance that is supposedly youthcentered, but filtered through constraining lenses adult understanding. Unlike these more traditional forms of youth theatre, in many instances, punk production eliminates the adult intermediary, since bands form outside adult-centered social structures like schools. Instead, young people practice and perform in their bedrooms, garages, basements, and occasionally music clubs, and they rarely engage a traditional adult mentor or supervisor to monitor their progress. By working almost completely outside adult supervision, punk allows youth voices to find a space of expression with limited censorship, and this freedom results in a form of theatrical performance that expresses young people’s unmediated ideas about the world—a performance of youth culture. Given this reality, I look at the US- based Riot Grrl movement of the 1990s, specifically focusing on the work of Bikini Kill frontwoman Kathleen Hanna in tandem with the more recent work of Russian punk band Pussy Riot (specifically the work of Nadya Tolokno and Maria Alyokhina) in the early 2010s to explore how punk rock feminist ideology morphed in the face of rapid global change. Through this study, I demonstrate how young female performances of resistance find relevancy and push for radical reimaginings of the world through uniquely female lenses of understanding. Seminar IV Facilitator: Cheela Chilala, University of Zambia Dr Christine Hatton University of Newcastle, Australia [email protected] The Tough Beauty Project: interrogating girl2girl violence through theatre and drama Girlhood studies have seen renewed scholarly interest in recent years, building on decades of feminist scholarship and research across a range of fields such as education, the arts, sociology, psychology and cultural studies. Scholars have interrogated how girls negotiate their lives, work and identities within social contexts and politics that are shaped by the discourses and regimes of patriarchy, inequity and neoliberalism. In the current climate of moral panic about urban youth as ‘dangerous’ and ‘out of control’, attention has turned to the ways in which girls learn and perform femininities and hyper-sexualities. In this climate interest has also turned to girl2girl violence as a contemporary phenomenon. In western countries girl2girl violence is reportedly becoming more prevalent, more accepted within youth cultures, and in terms of justice systems, more regularly and systematically punished. Simultaneously, there appears to be an increased voyeurism and titillation associated with ‘girl on girl’ violence, where the performances of ‘bad girls’ are regularly scrutinized, judged and sensationalized in popular culture, mass media and online. Recent research in drama and girls education has focussed on the ways dramatic processes might be used to critically examine girl’s stories and gendered experiences in difficult contexts and times (Hatton 2012, 2013). This paper links this research to Tough Beauty, an Australian theatre project for young audiences which focussed on teenage girl2girl violence (http://toughbeauty.com.au). It was commissioned by the Casula Powerhouse Arts Centre (CPAC) in south western Sydney, a culturally diverse and rapidly expanding regional centre. This theatre project written by Finegan Kruckemeyer and directed by Claudia Chidiac was designed with youth at the heart of the play’s content, its creative process and the performance experience. Tough Beauty dramatised complex girl terrain, using theatre as a means of excavating and problematizing the experience of girl violence from the inside: from a girl’s point of view. The project raised important questions about how girls craft and manage their identities, relationships and spaces in difficult times and contexts. This paper reports on the artistic and educational challenges of staging a work of this kind for contemporary teen audiences and considers the implications for girls’ education in and beyond the drama classroom and theatrical event. This paper considers the positioning and critical engagement of youth as both complicit audiences and active players within the onstage fictional representations of violent girl landscapes. Tough Beauty aimed to open up aesthetic spaces for youth engagement, offering important critical frames for youth (and their teachers) to interrogate their worlds and relationships. Importantly in response to unstable contexts and complex problems in which all are implicated, this type of TYA does not supply easy answers, rather it invites youth audiences to be active meaning makers and empathetic players as they negotiate their way through these landscapes. ************************************************************************************ Tamara Goldbogen Weber State University [email protected] An Exploration of Life, Loss, and Lessons Learned in Finegan Kruckemeyer’s Contemporary Fairy Tale This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing My paper will examine the ways in which Australian playwright Finegan Kruckemeyer’s play This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing addresses and subverts the representations of young women overcoming loss, searching for a home, and coming of age. The opening of Kruckemeyer’s (2013) This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing begins in a familiar way: Once upon a time, a girl was born. And twice upon a time, a girl was born. And thrice upon a time, a girl was born. Until there existed three girls who were sisters, who were triplets. Albienne was the oldest. And Beatrix was the next. And Carmen was youngest. (p. 1) This language conjures up expectations of myth and fairy tale in its presentation. And while Kruckemeyer’s storytelling utilizes many familiar dramatic conventions, this tale of three sisters finds new insights into the contemporary representation of youth on stage. I will explore how Kruckemeyer’s Theatre for Young Audiences script successfully draws from traditional forms of storytelling (fairy tales, myths, legends) and pushes the medium forward with contemporary stylings. Guiding questions for my research are: What contemporary representations of women are offered in the play? How does the playwright create a bridge between the traditional and the contemporary? How are the themes of war, death, and leadership represented for our youngest audience members? How does Kruckemeyer explore the notion of family in this script? How is the culture of the playwright reflected in the storytelling? In This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing, Kruckemeyer has created a world where the audience is taken on a journey to experience three sisters’ passages from childhood to adulthood. Touchstones for my research will include multiple drafts of Kruckemeyer’s script as well as my experience producing the North American premiere of This Girl Laughs, This Girl Cries, This Girl Does Nothing at the University of Pittsburgh (Spring 2012) and subsequent touring production (Spring 2013). Through my inquiry, I will examine Kruckemeyer’s contemporary representations of young women overcoming loss, searching for a home, and coming of age in the play while referencing my own experience translating this powerful story for the stage. ************************************************************************************ Andrew Waldron Arizona State University [email protected] Turning the Red Tide: Creative Arts Team and AIDS Education in NYC, 1986-1992 This study examines the creation and development of the Creative Arts Team’s (CAT) HIV/AIDS education program in New York City, which brought sexual health issues into the foreground. The primary research questions address how the company employed drama education methods in response to societal concerns for urban youth, misinformation about the disease, and the general atmosphere of fear that permeated AIDS discourse in the public sphere. Drawing from their previous drama work with sex and teen populations, CAT confronted the relatively unknown health crisis that was suddenly gripping the United States, particularly in urban areas like New York City. Both city leaders and educators recognized that young people were the most at-risk for infection, whether by unsafe sexual practices or by intravenous drug use. However, they were constrained by conflicting social, cultural, ideological, and political beliefs that were often in direct opposition to the notion of teaching children about a much misunderstood disease. Despite the socio-political cacophony of arguments about condom access, abstinence-only education, the apparent promotion of homosexuality, and the risk to young people, CAT brought discussions about safer sex and intravenous drug use directly into the classroom, modeled responsible sexual behaviors, and tackled teen questions head on. The multi- faceted and continuously evolving program arose from CAT’s own work with Theatre of the Oppressed and their partnership with New York University. Amidst a groundswell of civic support, evident in meeting minutes from the AIDS and Adolescents Network of New York, along with feedback from local and state health organizations, CAT performed the piece for private, public, and alternative high schools, outreach programs, homeless shelters, and youth correctional facilities. This study aims to show how the Creative Arts Team’s work not only changed the way New Yorkers viewed the disease, but also how youth throughout the world were taught about the pandemic. ************************************************************************************ Roxanne Schroeder-Arce Department of Theatre and Dance The University of Texas at Austin [email protected] Seeking Culturally Responsive Pedagogical Practice: Teaching TYA as Other in the University Setting My pre-service theatre education students often respond with some hesitation when I charge them with selecting and directing plays which represent the lives and characters that their future students may recognize, not necessarily those that are closest to their own lived experience. While I have played the role of Other as an artist and pedagogue before and reflected on both as a scholar, a recent production of And Then Came Tango by Emily Freeman, placed me in the role of Other again, this time as director of the play and professor of the class that was to tour the production. As a straight, married woman, my identity as Other in the process of working on the play exploring the journey of two male penguins who father a baby chick brought up new questions for me as Other and forced me to again look at the question of how we represent Others on and off stage, as artists, pedagogues and scholars. While I had prepared myself for the role of director of the play in relation to my own identity and representation of this story that is not my own, I had not prepared myself for what became a more challenging role: the role of professor, leader and advocate for this production when it faced great adversity and our tour was ultimately cancelled. As TYA practitioners who are in most instances representing Others, often adults representing children and communities other than our own, this question of representation of Other is vital to our work. In this paper, I reflect on my journey as Other in this production process, a new kind of representation and vehement adversity that I have never before experienced. The paper employs scholarship around pedagogy and otherness, representation, and culturally responsive education. Ultimately, through teaching this class, I was reminded that the charge I offer my students about telling stories of Others is a tremendous challenge and responsibility which requires constant self-reflection, openness and empathy. Given the increasing partisanship in the US around gay marriage and other pressing issues, pre-service educators must be prepared to engage with opposing views of schools and parents. The contemporary child, growing up in a divided society, needs to see examples of Otherness in theatre as well as examples of characters facing adversity around Otherness. And Then Came Tango offered both, as well as the opportunity for me to sit in and model an authentic place of concern and bewilderment as I looked at the world through an Other’s eyes, even for a moment. For TYA practitioners, this is a critical space to consider as we represent the life of the contemporary child. ************************************************************************************ Dr Steve Ball Associate Director Birmingham Repertory Theatre, Birmingham, UK [email protected] Professor Jane Coad. Professor in Children and Family Nursing, Centre for Children and Families Applied Research (CCFAR). Coventry University. [email protected] Planting ….and Growing Seeds For The Future This paper will present a longitudinal commissioned evaluation of the impact of the social and educational role of Birmingham Repertory Theatre, West Midlands UK, with respect to an early years theatre project, delivered to a cohort of children born in Birmingham City and Sandwell general hospitals during October, 2004 who were all offered a free theatre experience every year for the first ten years of their lives. Birmingham Repertory Theatre is situated in the city centre of Birmingham, West Midlands and is located near some of the highest levels of health inequalities, social deprivation and social exclusion in England. The project, known as REP’s Children, has continued for the last nine years during which time Birmingham Repertory Theatre has developed and sustained the participatory relationship with the October 2004 cohort. The REP’s Children project, delivered by the Learning and Participation team, comprises of theatre experiences for the families which to date has included a combination of theatre and art activities in order to help increase access and reduce pre-conceived ideas about the arts. The initial three year evaluation was important in ensuring that the project met the identified aims and drew together clear messages about engagement with families in delivering early-years theatre projects. The REP’s Children project was repeated in February 2013 with Birmingham City Hospital and Heartlands Hospital and is currently being evaluated. At the outset of this project, Birmingham Repertory Theatre were committed to evaluating what differences this would make to the children and families lives and commissioned to Professor Jane Coad, Coventry University for three years to ensure that this innovative project met the identified aims. Evidence was collated from the 230 families who agreed and included demographic data, questionnaires and participatory focus group interviews with parents and steering group members/artists delivering the programme. A particular strength is that the views of young children and families who experienced the project were sought over three years. A rich in-depth picture emerged and important comparisons about what families valued in the programme emerged. It was envisaged that the evaluation of REP’s Children could make a difference to children and families from the outset but our presentation will highlight how the programme and working together in partnership contributed to the team’s learning surrounding planning, delivery and current provision of early-years theatre and arts projects. This seminar will allow exchange and discuss the topics addressed in our paper. It will have resonance for many delegates faced with such challenges of early years arts programmes. ************************************************************************************ Manon PASQUIER sociology of young audiences and cultural practices consultant ASSITEJ France member [email protected] / [email protected] Spectators Today, Audiences of Festivals for Young Audiences "Spectateurs d’aujourd’hui, les publics des festivals jeune public" (Spectators today, audiences of festivals for young audiences) is an exploratory research in social sciences, conducted and written by Manon Pasquier and based on family audiences from the french festivals Petits et Grands (Nantes – 44), Mé li’mô me (Reims – 51) and Festi’Mô mes (Questembert – 56). Even if we can find sociological data and research results about libraries or museums attendance by the young audiences, there is almost no work in France about the relationship between theatre and children as well as families. Started in 2011, this exploratory research submits a reflection in 3 parts, in order to question the audiences of the French theatre for young audiences : I. The performing arts for the early childhood audience II. The impact of the performing arts for young audiences on the spectator-child III. The theater for young audiences as a family experience The main purpose of this qualitative and quantitative research is to emphasize the extent of children and families experiences. And, overall, it provides precious information about spectator habits and practices. III. The theater for young audiences as a family experience : How children and parents experience this moment of the performance ? How is it prepared and organized ? What does happen before, after ? Do parents and children talk together about it ? What are the experiences of each family ? Do these families develop spectator habits ? Do the parents who attempt a performance with their children have already spectator habits ? Are they interested in arts education ? What are their expectations about the theatre festivals for young audiences ? How theatre for young audiences is received by these parents? Regarding the methods used in this third part, 17 families have been questioned during collective and individual interviews (22 adults and 18 children from 5 to 15 years old). Gathering children’s testimonies is a rarely-used method in France, but it has been essential in this research. Moreover, the cross-checking data from children’s speech on one hand and parent’s speech on the other was particularly instructive. All these testimonies enable to achieve a much deeper understanding of the performing arts reception of each member of families and to work on issues like cultural transmission, discovery of the performing arts at any age, practice of the spectator and its empowerment as the experiences increase... The various analyses and parts of answer are punctuated by portraits of families who participate on a caseby-case basis or regularly to theater festivals for young audiences. Finally, this research brings to light a wide range of experiences, because each family is a singular spectator, depending on the family structure, the number and the age of children, the parent-child relationship and their tendency of speaking together, their life habits and priorities, their leisure activities... rather than factors as the parents’ socio-occupational category and the place of residence (city or countryside). ************************************************************************************ Joohee Park Adjunct Instructor, Sogang University, Seoul, Korea [email protected] Perceptions of the Contemporary Teenager in State Sponsored and Private Korean Theatre for Young Audiences Companies Not long ago, I had an interesting conversation with a researcher at the National Theater Company of Korea. We were talking about the film Hwhy, in which a seventeen year old boy comes face to face with an ugly truth about his father(s), and explodes into a killing spree of revenge. The researcher noted that the teenage character could be someone who contemporary teenagers think is awesome, someone who takes matters into his own actions; I wryly replied that the movie is rated “R” and therefore teenagers could not watch it at the cinema. An interesting conversation followed, as we discussed exactly which element of the film deserved to be restricted: gun violence? A hint of sexual content? Swearing? We could find anything that could not be found in the video games or television programs that Korean teenagers gain access to on a daily basis, yet the film was officially banned to those under eighteen years old. I found myself thinking, how do state funded/sponsored art for youth and private art for youth perceive children differently? In this paper, I compare TYA works produced for adolescents (age 13-18) by the National Theater Company of Korea to TYA productions by the company Jeendong. Since 2011, the National Theater Company of Korea has produced four TYA productions aimed at teenage audiences, each dealing with crime, bullying and friendship, pregnancy, and love. While the National Theater Company is not fully state funded, the producers and artists work with a mission to establish an exemplary repertoire of theatre for adolescents in Korea. In contrast, the works of Jeendong, founded in 2001, focus on what the producers/artists think teenagers would like to see on stage. Jeendong has also produced plays on love, pregnancy, bullying, and crime, but the message and aesthetics of the plays by the National Theatre Company and Jeendong are quite different. The former tends to portray its subjects in a more poetic and reserved manner, while the latter often throws the subject directly into the audiences’ faces. The perceptions of contemporary youth and what art for youth “ought to be” in plays by the two groups vary widely, and the goal of this paper is to analyze where the dissonance come from. I am informed by the theoretical frameworks of Antonio Gramsci (“cultural hegemony”) and Louis Althusser (“Ideological State Apparatus”) and start from the assumption that TYA is an ideological tool that can spread the ideology of the dominant class, but at the same time can attempt to overcome and upset hegemony through subversive content and aesthetics. In this paper I examine the how perceptions of youth are expressed through the subject, text, and aesthetical choice of TYA plays by the National Theatre Company of Korea and Jeendong, and compare works by the two. I also assume that as the two companies operate under different material conditions, that such circumstances inevitably influence their practices of TYA. ************************************************************************************ Ivana Djilas, MA Assitej Slovenia University of Ljubljana [email protected] Accessibility and the equitable distribution of cultural content for young audiences in Slovenia: Who are we making theatre performances for? In the long years of fighting for the professionalisation, acknowledgment and respect of theatre for the young audience in Slovenia, a great deal has been achieved: today, productions intended for young audiences have comparable budgets to regular productions in professional government-supported repertoire theatres, noninstitutional theatre groups have access to funding, tickets are less expensive due to lower self-funding requirements in institutions that produce art for children, both parents and teachers are involved in taking children to theatres, there is more media engagement and less commercial pressure in theatre for young audiences, and art in the school system is now even being included in the National Programme for Culture as one of its priorities. However, while a great deal has been achieved in the struggle for the quality of theatre for children and young audiences, audience numbers are, paradoxically, diminishing. In the fifth year of the financial crisis, Slovenian repertory theatres are now too expensive to support. Production costs are being reduced, tickets are being aggressively marketed and, in spite of discussions on cultural education, any commercially viable audience is being targeted. Thus, at a time when more and more families have difficulty providing for the basic needs of their children, we are producing more and more performances for fewer and fewer children. In this situation, we are forced to start asking hard questions. Which children really have access to cultural content? Are these the children with the greatest need for this kind of access to culture? What will the cumulative effect of the crisis be on our cultural capital? Are we investing in culture in the right areas? Could art be free of charge for young audiences? Should art be free anyway? What can be done to reduce the differences between children? Unfortunately, we do not have research providing the facts. We are essentially surmising that most children with access to art live in the capital city and a few larger towns, and that access is assured by parents and teachers who themselves care for and attend theatre, while children from families with lower cultural capital are less likely to ever be able to establish contact with art and the theatre. For this reason, we have decided to create a network that will offer access and equitable sharing of cultural content to children and young people in socially deprived environments. In particular, our network will offer a chance to freely attend professional high-quality performances to children and young adults in kindergartens, schools, refugee centres, Roma cultural centres, schools for children with special needs and similar institutions. We plan to integrate the network with the education system and thus enable teachers to use art in pre-primary and primary education. We are convinced that this approach will increase Slovenia’s cultural capital, and we hope to demonstrate that this kind of investment pays off for our country and for Europe.