Popular Theatre in Political Culture: Britain and Canada in focus

Popular Theatre in Political Culture: Britain and Canada in focus

by Tim Prentki, Jan Selman
Popular Theatre in Political Culture: Britain and Canada in focus

Popular Theatre in Political Culture: Britain and Canada in focus

by Tim Prentki, Jan Selman

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Overview

The first comparative study on the history and practice of popular theatre in Britain and overseas. The fragmentation of social groups in the face of the global mass media has begun to threaten the survival of popular theatre companies. This study traces the development of various types of community theatre, from the '70s to the present day. Integrating a comparative history of popular theatre with the contributions of current, active popular theatre makers, this book will appeal both to the theatrical practitioner and to the academic.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781841508597
Publisher: Intellect Books
Publication date: 01/01/2003
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 204
File size: 770 KB

About the Author

Tim Prentki is Emeritus Professor of Theatre for Development at the University of Winchester, United Kingdom, and a frequent contributor to Applied Theatre Research.

Read an Excerpt

Popular Theatre in Political Culture

Britain and Canada in focus


By Tim Prentki, Jan Selman

Intellect Ltd

Copyright © 2000 Intellect Ltd
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-84150-859-7



CHAPTER 1

Defining Popular Theatre


What is it?

Popular theatre is the practice of theatre as an expression of specific communities' stories, issues, knowledge and needs. The term implies certain things about a project's intention, about the process engaged in to create it, ownership, the relationship of the performance to the audience, and about the project's accessibility. The term sometimes, but not necessarily, also implies things about its form, content, and the venue in which it is played. Popular theatre is a process of theatre which deeply involves specific communities in identifying issues of concern, analysing current conditions and causes of a situation, identifying points of change, and analysing how change could happen and/or contributing to the actions implied. The theatre is always part of the process of identifying and exploring how a situation or issue might be changed. It is sometimes part of the resulting actions.

Theatre makes concepts concrete and real for people. It involves its audience both intellectually and emotionally, it sensitises audiences to issues, ideas and people portrayed, and it engenders a personal connection with the events and characters watched on stage. Community based theatre goes a step further; when a play is directly relevant to audience members' lives and concerns, a process begins which can lead to deeper understanding and change. Observers recognise the character(s) and their dilemmas and identify with the people portrayed. And because they can watch rather than live the experience, they also objectify the problems, and in so doing begin to be able to think about possible solutions or alternative actions. The combining of empathetic involvement with the opportunity to observe, analyse and form opinions regarding the characters' actions creates a condition where an audience both wants to think and has the opportunity to problem solve in a safe but vital environment. Popular theatre engages in this powerful activity and it goes one step further.

Popular theatre is based on the Brazilian community educator, Paolo Freire's principles of education: it embraces the notions of exchange, participant ownership, reflection and action. 'Popular' refers to the attempt to work with the forms and contents of the specific cultural context in which the process is situated. It is theatre created with, by and for the communities most involved in the issues it seeks to address. When the process of making the theatre is given over to community members, communities can come to control the content and the form of this powerful medium. A space is created where groups and individuals can afford to work on dangerous issues. They can use the process to clarify their views, to investigate dilemmas, to analyse their social, political and economic situations, to challenge assumptions, to strategise, to 'rehearse for action', and to share their insights with others within and without their immediate community.

The term 'popular' is problematic, but here is used to imply that this is a people's theatre, a theatre that belongs to the community. A theatre which expresses and grows out of the immediate social context. There is an implication of engagement in the popular culture of the society, a use of forms which are recognisable, attractive and accessible to the community most involved in the issues. Of course this idea has been shown to be highly problematic in numerous ways, however, each label given this form of theatre (theatre for development, community-based theatre, theatre for change, etc.) holds its own set of limitations, and this one continues to be used, particularly in Canada.

When used to describe this work to those unfamiliar with it, it leads to some natural confusions. It is often taken to mean 'popular' as in 'a lot of people attend'. While this may or may not be the case with this community based social and theatrical endeavour, in Canada this idea leads to an assumption that the megamusical is the current 'popular theatre'. However, better described as 'populist', this form contradicts almost every principle of popular theatre: despite its popularity, it is inaccessible to the majority due to prohibitive ticket prices; it is imported culture, created and controlled by interests external to the local community; it is seldom about anything of immediate concern to its audience; it is escapist and entertaining, but of little relevance. The Fringe Theatre movement is also sometimes seen as 'popular'; whereas it is more accessible (prices) and more 'user friendly', with its festive street life and community spirit, it would not be seen as popular theatre in the sense we mean here. While there may indeed be popular theatre projects which hold performances at a Fringe, there would need to be several other elements in place aside from this friendly venue.

In the case of popular theatre, 'popular' implies that the process of making and showing the theatre piece is owned and controlled by a specific community, that the issues and stories grow out of the community involved, and that that community is a vital part of a process of identifying, examining and taking action on matters which that community believes need to change. There is also an implication that the communities involved are little heard from in the mainstream media, that they are in some way disenfranchised or powerless. The 'popular' refers to 'of the people', belonging to the people.

So, another definition. Popular theatre is theatre process and performance which is used as part of a process of change. It sets out to be part of a movement towards greater empowerment on the part of participants. It tries to be part of social and political change as well as individual change. It tries to enable those who are marginalised in some way to examine collectively their issues from their perspective, to analyse causes of these issues, to explore avenues of potential action about the issue in question, and to create an opportunity to take such action.

Popular theatre is practised by those who sense there is an urgent need for change in the society and conditions in which many live. It seeks radical change. It questions the social and political structure, and presumes that there is a more egalitarian social makeup possible. It seeks to be part of social movements which pursue justice and equality. As such, it tends, in Canada and Britain, to pursue change within and for a variety of sectors of society including: immigrant communities, senior citizens, specific neighbourhoods, prisons, women and violence groups, native communities, poverty groups, etc. It is used as a form of resistance, and as a tool for strategising for change.


Where has it come from?

A variety of influences have led to the upsurge of interest in popular and other community-based theatre approaches over the past thirty years.

Theatre artists in Europe and North America with an interest in social justice have observed decreasing attendance in mainstream venues, particularly by the audiences they most hoped to reach.

They have wanted to explore alternative, and more accessible locations and therefore different styles, styles suitable to these varying locations.

Some theatre artists who embrace the German playwright Bertolt Brecht's intentions looked for other ways to reach their intended audiences. Artists and groups such as Armand Gatti in France, Welfare State in England, Bread and Puppet Theatre in the United States and The Mummers in Newfoundland, Canada sought alternative venues, forms and processes of theatre making in order to reach and impact audiences not served by current mainstream theatre of the day.

The increasing dominance of television and film encouraged theatre artists to explore the ways in which live theatre is unique. Part of this exploration led to deep investigation of the communal potential of live theatre, the potential for two-way communication, community building and active participation.

Adult educators and community organisers sought participatory and emancipatory approaches to education and community research.

Meanwhile, theatre was being used increasingly as a social and educative tool in southern countries. In Latin America, Africa, and South and East Asia theatre artists, development workers and adult educators saw theatre as an effective technique to embody and make culturally specific development messages. With the increasing belief in the importance of two-way communication and deep involvement of communities in decisions affecting their own development, theatre practice shifted in some areas to a highly participatory process, with members of communities participating in the making and performing of theatre about their community, its problems and possible solutions. In other areas trained actors continued to perform, but emphasis was placed upon the interactive and participatory nature of the performance.

These sets of ideas found their way to northern countries, were blended with theatre artists' and community educators' agendas, and took root. Some of these 'southern' ideas were (problematically) applied with little or no change to the vastly different circumstances. However practitioners have increasingly adapted and invented to suit northern contexts. Popular theatre workers' application of such work in the 'north' still seeks to embrace these development roots, but also to reform them to suit very different social and cultural conditions.


The South will Rise Again

The different applications of the labels 'popular theatre' and 'theatre for development' are indicative of the attitudes which underlie their usage. 'Popular' or 'community' theatre is variously employed to describe activities in North America and Europe which are conducted outside of the theatrical mainstream and their purpose-built spaces. Similar activities occurring in other parts of the world attract the tag 'theatre for development'. The implication is clear: people from these regions need to be developed and are using theatre as a means to assist in this process. People in North America and Europe need to discover what it is that makes them into 'a people' and how the action of 'community' might assist them in their explorations. First World resistance to the term 'theatre for development' echoes the division of the globe into 'developed' and 'underdeveloped' regions, first created by President Harry Truman in his Inaugural Address of January 20th 1949:

We must embark on a bold new programme for making the benefits of our scientific advances and industrial progress available for the improvement and growth of underdeveloped areas. The old imperialism - exploitation for foreign profit - has no place in our plans. What we envisage is a programme of development based on the concepts of democratic fair dealing (1967).


So the old imperialism gave way to the new: attaching the label 'underdeveloped' to large areas of the world and then proceeding to determine their economic, social and cultural needs according to the decrees of the institutions established by the United States Government to administer those needs; namely the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund. Western governments set up departments of overseas development and non-governmental agencies mushroomed in the new spirit of righting the ancient wrongs of the colonial era, whilst ensuring that the old power relations remained in place through devices such as interest payments on loans and a series of economic policies like the notorious structural adjustment and the cynically named 'free trade'. Having firmly placed these nations in the camp of 'the other', the strategy was to impose development imperatives upon them intended to make them more like 'us'.

In the 1960s development communications generally meant the transmission of messages from the centre to the periphery. This period, referred to in development history as the 'modernisation' phase, was marked by a belief that development was mainly a matter of economics. Where cultural aspects appeared at all, they were in the service of economic goals. Agitprop style sketches might have a role to play in proclaiming the advantages of a certain type of fertiliser or in urging people to trust western forms of medicine. The forms harked back to the European and US movements of the 1920s and 1930s but there was no element of dialogue; merely experts addressing peasants as parents to children. The model, consciously or not, was colonial. Thus theatre contributed to the stream of monological communications from the centre to the periphery, ignoring or devaluing local knowledge and promoting the knowledge developed in western metropolitan centres without regard for the effects of specific local conditions and cultural contexts.

These contexts have figured a little more prominently in development methodologies of more recent times when the cultural component has been identified as a key factor in effective strategies for community intervention. Just as notions of participation began to figure in the policies of development agencies, the work of Paulo Freire, was gaining recognition in the 'developed' world in the wake of his book Pedagogy of the Oppressed. Freire emphasises the importance of dialogue in any transformative educational process, an emphasis which has found frequent echoes in the rhetoric of development, if not always in its practices. This emphasis was given a specifically theatrical application through the theory and practices of Freire's compatriot Augusto Boal as outlined in his bookTheatre of the Oppressed, the very title of which reveals the major influence of Freire. Boal's work has enabled a direct line to be drawn, linking development education to theatre. Although many people in the First and Third Worlds were already working with the techniques described by Boal under other names, his work, and more especially the fact that he has written about it, has been a substantial factor in the growth of theatre for development as a distinct set of practices at the radical end of the popular theatre continuum.

An obvious advantage of using theatre performances in this kind of development work is that they attract crowds; in the case of rural contexts they frequently attract the entire available community in places where whole villages are in the habit of attending meetings at designated places, such as a prominent shady tree or the space in front of the head-man's hut. For practitioners in these circumstances there are none of the familiar North American and European problems of deciding who constitutes the community and then agonising about how to involve them in a drama process. Here the presence of a community is guaranteed, no matter how difficult issues such as democracy and participation may prove to be in trying to draw in the most marginalised sectors of that community. Although the process of engaging with targeted groups may be more problematic in urban centres, the tendency for life to be lived out on the streets usually means that people are quite at ease in the role of ad hoc audiences for street theatre and other open-air manifestations of popular theatre. The very 'backwardness' of many Third World societies means that they have retained the habits of a co-operative public life at a time when the fragmented, privatised west has destroyed the communal basis on which a mass, public event such as a popular theatre performance can thrive. Ironically in 'developed' societies it is now often the case that it is only groups of the socially excluded who can be identified as distinct communities by the labels of otherness that have been attached to them such as 'homeless', 'mentally disabled', 'drug users', 'travellers', etc. Therefore it is frequently these kinds of groups which attract the attention of community drama workers who are at least spared the pain of trying to establish who to include in the project. Theatre is a social process; if there is 'no such thing as society' in Margaret Thatcher's infamous words, perhaps there can be no such thing as theatre. If we are now separate islands of private people making our own individual meanings out of images and statements set before us, we are fit only to be postmodern fragments, occupying segregated cells in front of television screens that offer myths about virtual communities through the genre of soap opera that we, robbed of other evidence, increasingly mistake for the thing itself. Popular theatre plays a role in resisting this antisocial impulse.


Defining the Territory

The field of popular theatre is growing and changing rapidly; it is relatively young in its current manifestations. Definitions and careful use of terminology can serve to clarify our work, including our intentions, methodology, process, and use of theatrical forms.

There is a need to encourage a clarity of language in this field. While some separations may be seen as merely based in semantics, rather precise delineation among the variously socially interested theatrical activities seems worthwhile. To acknowledge the commonalties, overlaps and grey areas around and between these various kinds of theatre is to clarify intentions and assumptions. While we are rather disinterested in picky divisions and in the exclusivity of some definitions and criticisms, we see it as valuable to discuss further the clarification of our terms.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Popular Theatre in Political Culture by Tim Prentki, Jan Selman. Copyright © 2000 Intellect Ltd. Excerpted by permission of Intellect Ltd.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

Preface,
The Lawnmower,
1 Defining Popular Theatre,
2 Intentions,
3 Contexts,
4 Forms of Theatre,
5 Popular Theatre Process,
6 Dialogue on Issues,
Bibliography,
Endnotes,

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