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Creating Democratic Citizenship Through Drama Education: The Writings of Jonothan Neelands
Book Details
PublisherTrentham Books
ISBN / ASIN1858564565
ISBN-139781858564562
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank2,770,504
CategoryEducation
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
The relationship between theatre, democracy and pedagogy is explored through the theory and practice of Jonothan Neelands. This selection of his seminal texts in drama education over the last twenty five years shows how Neelands developed classroom participatory democracy through ensemble based theatre education. They feature:
* Neelands’ development in the 1980s of the conventions approach which made Dorothy Heathcote’s and Gavin Bolton’s "living through drama" more accessible to classroom teachers and which has come to dominate drama curricula across the globe
* his defence–along with Cecily O’Neill–of progressive drama education against the challenge by David Hornbrook and Peter Abbs in the early 1990s
* his passionate arguments for drama as both pedagogy and discipline
* his criticism of the privileging of high art over popular art
* his call for theatre education which is both presentational and representational, and for drama’s place within the English rather than the arts curriculum
* his response to 9/11: that drama is crucial in an age of uncertainty and intolerance: the humanizing and democratizing principles that define drama in education are a potent challenge to extremism
* his argument that ensemble-based theatre education allows young people to learn to act upon the world and bring about real change
* Neelands’ development in the 1980s of the conventions approach which made Dorothy Heathcote’s and Gavin Bolton’s "living through drama" more accessible to classroom teachers and which has come to dominate drama curricula across the globe
* his defence–along with Cecily O’Neill–of progressive drama education against the challenge by David Hornbrook and Peter Abbs in the early 1990s
* his passionate arguments for drama as both pedagogy and discipline
* his criticism of the privileging of high art over popular art
* his call for theatre education which is both presentational and representational, and for drama’s place within the English rather than the arts curriculum
* his response to 9/11: that drama is crucial in an age of uncertainty and intolerance: the humanizing and democratizing principles that define drama in education are a potent challenge to extremism
* his argument that ensemble-based theatre education allows young people to learn to act upon the world and bring about real change










