Destination know-where : a road map of a PhD journey in theatre for young people


Autoria(s): Gattenhof, Sandra Jane
Contribuinte(s)

Forrest, David

,

Data(s)

2012

Resumo

Within contemporary performance arenas young people are fast becoming part of the vanguard of contemporary performance. Performativity, convergence and openness of form are key animating concepts in the landscape of Theatre for Young People (TYP). To ignore what is taking place in the making of performance for and by young people is to ignore the new possibilities in meaning-making and theatrical form. This thesis investigates the contemporary practice within the field of Theatre for Young People. Pivotal to the study are three hallmarks of contemporary performance – shifting notions of performativity; convergence articulated in the use of technology and theatrical genres; and Umberto Eco’s realisation of openness in form and authorship. The thesis draws from theatre and performance studies, globalisation theory and youth studies. Using interviews of Theatre for Young People practitioners and observation of thirty-nine performances, this thesis argues that young people and Theatre for Young People companies are among the leaders of a paradigm shift in developing and delivering performance works. In this period of rapid technological change young people are embracing and manipulating technology (sound, image, music) to represent whom they are and what they want to say. Positioned as ‘cultural catalysts’ (McRobbie, 1999), ‘the new pioneers’ (Mackay, 1993) and ‘first navigators’ (Rushkoff, 1996) young people are using mediatised culture and digital technologies with ease, placing them at the forefront of a shift in cultural production. The processes of deterritorialisation allows for the synthesis of new cultural and performance genres by fragmenting and hybridising traditional cultural categories and forms including the use of new media technologies. Almost half of all TYP performances now incorporate the technologies of reproduction. The relationship between live and mediatised forms, the visceral and the virtual is allowing young people to navigate and make meaning of cultural codes and cultural forms as well as to engage in an open dialogue with their audiences. This thesis examines the way young people are using elements of deterritorialisation to become producers of new performance genres. The thesis considers the contemporary situation in relation to issues of performance making and performance delivery within a global, networked and technology-driven society.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57403/

Publicador

Australian Scholarly Publishing Pty Ltd.

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/57403/1/Forrest_Sandra_Gattenhof.pdf

Gattenhof, Sandra Jane (2012) Destination know-where : a road map of a PhD journey in theatre for young people. In Forrest, David & , (Eds.) The Doctoral Journey in Dance Education and Drama Education: Reflections on Doctoral Studies by Australian and New Zealand Art Educators. Australian Scholarly Publishing Pty Ltd., North Melbourne, Australia, pp. 95-110.

Direitos

Copyright 2012 David Forest

Fonte

ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation; Drama; Creative Industries Faculty; Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation

Palavras-Chave #190404 Drama Theatre and Performance Studies #contemporary performance #Doctor of Philosophy
Tipo

Book Chapter