Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits

Prison theatre practitioners and scholars often describe the sense of imaginative freedom or “escape” that theatre and drama can facilitate for incarcerated actors, in contrast to the strict regimes of the institution. Despite this, the concept of freedom or liberation is rarely interrogated, being...

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Main Author: Sarah Woodland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2021-09-01
Series:Humanities
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/10/3/101
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spelling doaj-c5370cf76d0c44d38c124ae6f2ad7d3a2021-09-26T00:16:43ZengMDPI AGHumanities2076-07872021-09-011010110110.3390/h10030101Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and LimitsSarah Woodland0Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne, Melbourne 3010, AustraliaPrison theatre practitioners and scholars often describe the sense of imaginative freedom or “escape” that theatre and drama can facilitate for incarcerated actors, in contrast to the strict regimes of the institution. Despite this, the concept of freedom or liberation is rarely interrogated, being presented instead as a given—a natural by-product of creative practice. Drawing from John Dewey’s (1934) pragmatist aesthetics and the liberatory pedagogies of Bell Hooks (2000) and Paulo Freire (1996), I propose an embodied aesthetics of liberation in prison theatre that adds depth and complexity to claims for freedom through creativity. Reflecting on over twenty years of prison theatre practice and research, I propose that the initial “acts of escape” performed through engaging the imagination are merely the first threshold toward more meaningful forms of freedom. I frame these as the following three intersecting domains: “Acts of unbinding”, which represents the personal liberation afforded by experiences with theatre in prison; “acts of love”, which expresses how the theatre ensemble might represent a “beloved community” (hooks); and “acts of liberation”, which articulates how these experiences of self-and-world creation may ripple out to impact audiences and communities. An aesthetics of liberation in prison theatre can, therefore, be conceived as an embodied movement towards personal and social renewal; an approach that deepens our understanding of its oft-cited humanising potential, and its limits.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/10/3/101theatre studiesprison theatreapplied theatreapplied dramaaestheticspragmatist aesthetics
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sarah Woodland
spellingShingle Sarah Woodland
Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
Humanities
theatre studies
prison theatre
applied theatre
applied drama
aesthetics
pragmatist aesthetics
author_facet Sarah Woodland
author_sort Sarah Woodland
title Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
title_short Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
title_full Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
title_fullStr Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
title_full_unstemmed Prison Theatre and an Embodied Aesthetics of Liberation: Exploring the Potentials and Limits
title_sort prison theatre and an embodied aesthetics of liberation: exploring the potentials and limits
publisher MDPI AG
series Humanities
issn 2076-0787
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Prison theatre practitioners and scholars often describe the sense of imaginative freedom or “escape” that theatre and drama can facilitate for incarcerated actors, in contrast to the strict regimes of the institution. Despite this, the concept of freedom or liberation is rarely interrogated, being presented instead as a given—a natural by-product of creative practice. Drawing from John Dewey’s (1934) pragmatist aesthetics and the liberatory pedagogies of Bell Hooks (2000) and Paulo Freire (1996), I propose an embodied aesthetics of liberation in prison theatre that adds depth and complexity to claims for freedom through creativity. Reflecting on over twenty years of prison theatre practice and research, I propose that the initial “acts of escape” performed through engaging the imagination are merely the first threshold toward more meaningful forms of freedom. I frame these as the following three intersecting domains: “Acts of unbinding”, which represents the personal liberation afforded by experiences with theatre in prison; “acts of love”, which expresses how the theatre ensemble might represent a “beloved community” (hooks); and “acts of liberation”, which articulates how these experiences of self-and-world creation may ripple out to impact audiences and communities. An aesthetics of liberation in prison theatre can, therefore, be conceived as an embodied movement towards personal and social renewal; an approach that deepens our understanding of its oft-cited humanising potential, and its limits.
topic theatre studies
prison theatre
applied theatre
applied drama
aesthetics
pragmatist aesthetics
url https://www.mdpi.com/2076-0787/10/3/101
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