Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing

Informed by 25 years of lecturing in UK universities and a recent relocation to Australia, this article suggests that the ways in which performance studies has sometimes collapsed into a type of watered-down drama school approach is problematic within the non-vocational areas of the university secto...

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Main Author: Freeman, John
Format: Journal Article
Published: Intellect 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12434
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author Freeman, John
author_facet Freeman, John
author_sort Freeman, John
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Informed by 25 years of lecturing in UK universities and a recent relocation to Australia, this article suggests that the ways in which performance studies has sometimes collapsed into a type of watered-down drama school approach is problematic within the non-vocational areas of the university sector. The drive of the article is that, rather than seeking to emulate the training focus of drama schools, university drama, theatre and performance programmes need to hold fast to traditions of study in ways that fuse innovative pedagogy with shifts in opportunities for graduates. In this way, the illusion of training makes way for learning that makes a positive feature of low staff/student contact hours and places emphasis on creativity rather than theatre craft.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-124342017-09-13T14:59:52Z Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing Freeman, John vocational/non-vocational performance studies plurality drama school training embodied learning creative industries Informed by 25 years of lecturing in UK universities and a recent relocation to Australia, this article suggests that the ways in which performance studies has sometimes collapsed into a type of watered-down drama school approach is problematic within the non-vocational areas of the university sector. The drive of the article is that, rather than seeking to emulate the training focus of drama schools, university drama, theatre and performance programmes need to hold fast to traditions of study in ways that fuse innovative pedagogy with shifts in opportunities for graduates. In this way, the illusion of training makes way for learning that makes a positive feature of low staff/student contact hours and places emphasis on creativity rather than theatre craft. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12434 10.1386/stap.33.1.77_1 Intellect restricted
spellingShingle vocational/non-vocational
performance studies
plurality
drama school training
embodied learning
creative industries
Freeman, John
Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title_full Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title_fullStr Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title_full_unstemmed Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title_short Performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
title_sort performance studies, actor training and boutique borrowing
topic vocational/non-vocational
performance studies
plurality
drama school training
embodied learning
creative industries
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/12434