Cover image for Applied Drama and Theatre as an Interdisciplinary Field in the Context of HIV/AIDS in Africa.
Applied Drama and Theatre as an Interdisciplinary Field in the Context of HIV/AIDS in Africa.
Title:
Applied Drama and Theatre as an Interdisciplinary Field in the Context of HIV/AIDS in Africa.
Author:
Barnes, Hazel.
ISBN:
9789401210539
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (295 pages)
Series:
Matatu ; v.Vol. 43

Matatu
Contents:
Cover -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of Illustrations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- SETTING THE SCENE -- Negotiating the Space: Challenges for Applied-Theatre Praxis with Local Non-Governmental/Community-Based Organizations in HIV/AIDS Contexts in Uganda -- HIV Communication: Global Emergencies, Media Templates, and African Communities (A Personal Journey) -- INNOVATIONS IN RESEARCH APPROACHES -- Appreciative Inquiry - An Alternative Approach to Applied Theatre -- After the Curtain - Reframed: Using Action Research to Reflect, Monitor, and Evaluate the Applied-Theatre Experience -- Collaboration as Research: Yale University, Siwela Sonke Dance Theatre, Clowns Without Borders South Africa, and People's Educational Theatre Swaziland -- Participatory Theatre for Development as Action Research: Methodological, Theoretical and Ethical Challenges, Tensions and Possibilities with Specific Reference to an HIV/AIDS and Disability Project (2007-2010) -- INNOVATIONS IN HIV/AIDS AWARENESS EDUCATION -- The Lover and Another: A Consideration of the Efficacy of Utilizing a Performance Poetry Competition as Vehicle for HIV/AIDS Education Among Young Adults -- Do, Be, Do: Insights from 'Rapid Cognition' in a Theatre-Making Process -- Space and Involvement - Theatre in (a) South African Prison -- INNOVATIONS IN RESEARCH PRACTICE/THEORY -- Dramatic Spaces in Patriarchal Contexts: Constructions and Disruptions of Gender in Theatre Interventions About HIV -- This Is My Story: A Model for Creating Performance Engaging Artists and People Living with HIV/AIDS -- A Poetic of Contradictions? HIV/AIDS Interventions at the Crossroads of Localization and Globalization.

Project Njabulo: Using Storytelling, Drama, and Play Therapy for Psycho-Social Interventions in Communities Affected by HIV/AIDS in Southern Africa - Pathways to Empathetic Locally Sustainable Care -- INNOVATIVE CASE STUDIES -- Dramatic Beading -- Evaluation of Applied Drama and Theatre in HIV/AIDS Interventions: A Case Study of Themba Interactive -- Theatre as Border-Crossing Among Women Living with HIV: A Case Study of Zandspruit Informal Settlement -- Notes on Contributors -- Onomastic Index -- Notes for Contributors.
Abstract:
Drama for Life, University of the Witwatersrand, aims "to enhance the capacity of young people, theatre practitioners and their communities to take responsibility for the quality of their lives in the context of HIV and AIDS in Africa. We achieve this through participatory and experiential drama and theatre that is appropriate to current social realities but draws on the rich indigenous knowledge of African communities."Collected here is a representative set of research essays written to facilitate dialogue across disciplines on the role of drama and theatre in HIV/AIDS education, prevention, and rehabilitation. Reflections are offered on present praxis and the media, as well as on innovative research approaches in an interdisciplinary paradigm, along with HIV/AIDS education via performance poetry and other experimental methods such as participant-led workshops.Topics include: the call for a move away from the binaries of much critical pedagogy; a project, undertaken in Ghana and Malawi with people living with AIDS, to create and present theatre; the contradictions between global and local expectations of applied drama and theatre methodology, in relation to folk media, participation, and syncretism. Three case studies report on mapping as a creative device for playmaking; the methodology of Themba Interactive Theatre; and applying drama with women living with HIV in the Zandspruit Informal Settlement.The essays validate the importance of play in both energizing those in positions of hopelessness and enabling the distancing essential to observe one's situation and enable change. The book stimulates the ongoing investigation of current practice and extends an invitation to further develop innovative approaches. Hazel Barnes is a retired Head of Drama and Performance Studies at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, where she is a Senior Research

Associate. Her research interests lie in the field of applied drama, including the contexts of interculturalism and post-traumatic stress.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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