Giving and Taking Voice in Learning Disabled Theatre

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Giving and Taking Voice in Learning Disabled Theatre offers unique insight into the question of ‘voice’ in learning disabled theatre and what is gained and lost in making performance. It is grounded in the author's 18 years of making theatre with Different Light Theatre company in Christchurch, New Zealand, and includes contributions from the artists themselves. This book draws on an extensive archive of performer interviews, recordings of rehearsal processes, and informal logs of travelling together and sharing experience. These accounts engage with the practical aesthetics of theatre-making as well as their much wider ethical and political implications, relevant to any collaborative process seeking to represent the under- or un-represented. Giving and Taking Voice in Learning Disabled Theatre asks how care and support can be tempered with artistic challenge and rigour and presents a case for how listening learning disabled artists to speech encourages attunement to indigenous knowledge and the cries of the planet in the current socio-ecological crisis. This is a vital and valuable book for anyone interested in learning disabled theatre, either as a performer, director, dramaturg, critic, or spectator.

Author(s): Tony McCaffrey
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 210
City: London

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: Giving and Taking Voice
1. Setting the Scene: The Shadow Whose Prey the Hunter Becomes
2. Community Theatre and Myths of Community
3. Dramatic Theatre and the Temporality of Learning Disabled Theatre
4. Intertextuality and Intermediality: Performing Responses to the Disabling of the City
5. Learning Disabled Performance Research: Ecologies, Histories, Philosophies
6. From the Theatre to the After Party
Appendix: Chronology of Different Light Theatre Performances, Presentations, and Participants
Index