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Playbuilding as Qualitative Research: A Participatory Arts-Based Approach [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 272 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 498 g
  • Sērija : Developing Qualitative Inquiry
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Left Coast Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1598744763
  • ISBN-13: 9781598744767
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  • Hardback
  • Cena: 197,77 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 272 pages, height x width: 229x152 mm, weight: 498 g
  • Sērija : Developing Qualitative Inquiry
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Jan-2010
  • Izdevniecība: Left Coast Press Inc
  • ISBN-10: 1598744763
  • ISBN-13: 9781598744767
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Norris (drama in education and applied theatre, Brock U., Canada) merges the research and drama fields to illustrate the genre of arts-based qualitative research. Drawing from his experiences as director of Mirror Theatre, a theatre-in-education troupe in Canada, he details a playbuilding process that can be used by researchers and artists, methods used to generate data and the theatrical approaches used to disseminate research, working with the audience, and scenes by actors, researchers, and teachers from Mirror Theatre's programs and workshops who created and compiled voice collages, puppetry, narrated-mime, song, and other theatrical devices, with information on the history of each scene, its dissemination style, and its themes, such as sexuality, gender, substance abuse, and prejudice. In doing so, he questions the definition of knowledge and the concepts of analysis and data interpretation, considers the participatory aspects of research, and acknowledges that research is a constructed narrative. Annotation ©2010 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

This book is for both art-based researchers and research-informed artists, exploring the theatrical genre known as Collective Creation, or Playbuilding. Performers generate data around chosen topics— from addiction and sexuality to qualitative research—by compiling scenes from their disparate voices. Audience members become involved in the investigation, and the performed scenes do not end the conversation but challenge and extend it. Through discussion and audience participation, the process examines how knowledge is defined and how data is mediated.


This book is for both art-based researchers and research-informed artists, exploring the theatrical genre known as Collective Creation, or Playbuilding. Audience members become involved in the investigation, and the performed scenes do not end the conversation but challenge and extend it.

Recenzijas

"...Devising and performing theatrical work are sometimes perceived by non-practitioners as mysterious and elusive processes. But Joe Norris's Playbuilding as Qualitative Research accessibly documents the empirically-grounded and socially-conscious productions of Canada's renowned Mirror Theatre for a broad readership in the communities of education, sociology, social work, human communication, film and media production, and the arts. Norris persuasively makes the case for playbuilding as a genre of qualitative research that adheres to the principle tenets of inquiry in which art-based research and research-informed art are collaborative, emergent, data-driven, relevant, and ethical acts for audiences' social concerns and needs. Joe Norris's rigorous scholarship and sensitivity to lived experience weave together to present an engaging narrative of how qualitative researchers--not just theatre artists--can elegantly dramatize the salient issues of our lives for community reflection and action."... -Johnny Saldana, Arizona State University "...A key contribution of the book is Norris's invitation to consider theatre as a form of research that extends discussions instead of only presenting particular findings. More specifically, the theatrical presentation becomes part of the ongoing research itself as he invites his audience to engage with the given topic post-performance...I recommend Playbuilding as qualitative research for all arts-based researchers, and in particular those interested theatre/drama educational research. Readers will find a balance of theory, methodology, practice, and history in Norris' book, and as significant, they will witness nearly 30 years of creative, research work by a passionate, thoughtful, internationally-known theatre education practitioner-scholar."...--George Belliveau, International Journal of Education and the Arts "Just when I was all comfortable thinking I knew just what qualitative research is, how to conduct it, how to present the results, and especially how to judge the quality of it all, here comes your book with all of its genre-bending, category-blurring, deconstructing, reconstructing, unconstructing rhetoric. I read the plays, go back to the sections on how to create these productions, then back to plays again, and I can see how the productions can be seen as renderings of the data produced by the collective process. I can even see how you have a discussion section after your plays when you can discuss the implications and limitations of the work. It's just that I really hadn't thought about how similar research and art can be and what can happen when we push past the metaphor and take seriously what research can be when we embrace its artistry."--Ronald J. Chenail, The Qualitative Report "...There have long been gaps and questions in the story of how group constructed performance pieces and playbuilding actually become part of an accessible route towards valid qualitative research in theater. Joe Norris reclaims the voice of the theater practitioner in this latest addition to the Developing Qualitative Inquiry series. In Playbuilding as Qualitative Research he expertly guides the reader through the theory, techniques and experience of this participatory research approach in a way which will open the genre to the many, many theatre and arts practitioners who will be able to better join the dots between their own teaching and practice and its potential contribution as research."...--Jim Mienczakowski, Abu Dhabi Education Council

Preface 9(6)
Part I The Background
15(74)
Introduction: Toward a Theory of Playbuilding as Research
17(22)
``A'' Research to Performance Process
39(26)
History of Mirror Theatre
65(24)
Part II The Scripting
89(114)
Pressures: Understanding Peer Pressure and Sexual Activity through Sculpting and Readers Theatre
93(12)
The ``M'' Word: Understanding Sexuality through Improvisation and Personal Testimony
105(14)
Funky Shirt: Problematizing Clothing Communication through Voices Off and a Dream Sequence
119(10)
Cattle Call: Understanding Discrimination through Shadow Screen and Video
129(12)
I Expect: Understanding the Politics of Student Teaching through Voice Collage
141(10)
The Party: Understanding Status, Power, and Bullying through Gibberish and Body Language
151(8)
Dares: Understanding Risk Taking through Variations of a Theme
159(8)
Are You Really Listening? Understanding Prejudice through Inner Dialogue
167(8)
Who's with Whom? Understanding Prejudice through Mime
175(8)
Whose Pencil Is It Anyway? Understanding Conflict through Standard Dramatization and Scene Reconstruction
183(12)
Distillation: Understanding Qualitative Research through Metaphorical Machines
195(8)
Part III The Performance Workshop
203(50)
Participatory Dissemination: Working ``with'' an Audience
205(48)
Appendices
Permission Slip
237(2)
Membership Agreement
239(2)
Program Front Cover
241(2)
Actor's Contract
243(2)
Course Outline
245(4)
Expecting Respect Questionnaire Summary
249(2)
Program Back Cover
251(2)
References 253(12)
Index 265(6)
About the Author 271
Joe Norris was a co-founder and the artistic director of the Mirror Theatre, a social issues focused touring theatre troupe, and he co-edited the book Learning to Teach Drama: A Case Narrative Approach. He has served as the Theatre-in-Education Network Chair and Research Network Chair for the American Alliance for Theatre and Education. He presently teaches courses on integrating the arts in the curriculum, learning through drama, curriculum theory, qualitative research, drama as a way of knowing, and the principles of learning at St. Francis Xavier University.