Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology

In this article, I argue that playwriting and performance can act as powerful forms of activism that bridge academic work and public engagement. I analyze my experiences writing and producing a stage production that mobilizes knowledge from my research about queer antiracism in Toronto. This methodo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sylvia Grills
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-06-01
Series:SAGE Open
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211023398
id doaj-d52895c1432240f2a6db49a1b6052327
record_format Article
spelling doaj-d52895c1432240f2a6db49a1b60523272021-06-09T23:03:33ZengSAGE PublishingSAGE Open2158-24402021-06-011110.1177/21582440211023398Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public SociologySylvia Grills0Queen’s University, Kingston, Ontario, CanadaIn this article, I argue that playwriting and performance can act as powerful forms of activism that bridge academic work and public engagement. I analyze my experiences writing and producing a stage production that mobilizes knowledge from my research about queer antiracism in Toronto. This methodological discussion is contextualized within the current political moment that positions work in the humanities as irrelevant and elitist. Performance as a method of knowledge mobilization emerged from interviews with queer peoples and community organizers. I found through conversations with participants that academic forms of knowledge mobilization, such as publishing in peer-reviewed journals, would not necessarily be accessible to community members or appropriate for encouraging discussion and social action at the local level. Participants suggested a range of antiracism organizing strategies, most of their suggestions centered on increasing the understanding and the value of the arts. I decided to meet the challenge of engaging in effective knowledge mobilization that would be in service to the community by developing a stage production called We without You that focuses on the opinions and experiences of participants. I found that producing a stage production based on academic research had powerful social effects that are not possible through traditional knowledge dissemination methods. This article encourages academics to broaden their ideas about effective knowledge mobilization; to position their work as useful and relevant to social issues and as a means of critical resistance against polarization within and outside academia.https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211023398
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sylvia Grills
spellingShingle Sylvia Grills
Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
SAGE Open
author_facet Sylvia Grills
author_sort Sylvia Grills
title Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
title_short Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
title_full Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
title_fullStr Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
title_full_unstemmed Performance as Critical Resistance: Playwriting and Public Sociology
title_sort performance as critical resistance: playwriting and public sociology
publisher SAGE Publishing
series SAGE Open
issn 2158-2440
publishDate 2021-06-01
description In this article, I argue that playwriting and performance can act as powerful forms of activism that bridge academic work and public engagement. I analyze my experiences writing and producing a stage production that mobilizes knowledge from my research about queer antiracism in Toronto. This methodological discussion is contextualized within the current political moment that positions work in the humanities as irrelevant and elitist. Performance as a method of knowledge mobilization emerged from interviews with queer peoples and community organizers. I found through conversations with participants that academic forms of knowledge mobilization, such as publishing in peer-reviewed journals, would not necessarily be accessible to community members or appropriate for encouraging discussion and social action at the local level. Participants suggested a range of antiracism organizing strategies, most of their suggestions centered on increasing the understanding and the value of the arts. I decided to meet the challenge of engaging in effective knowledge mobilization that would be in service to the community by developing a stage production called We without You that focuses on the opinions and experiences of participants. I found that producing a stage production based on academic research had powerful social effects that are not possible through traditional knowledge dissemination methods. This article encourages academics to broaden their ideas about effective knowledge mobilization; to position their work as useful and relevant to social issues and as a means of critical resistance against polarization within and outside academia.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/21582440211023398
work_keys_str_mv AT sylviagrills performanceascriticalresistanceplaywritingandpublicsociology
_version_ 1721386446056587264