Editor’s音符

Q1 Arts and Humanities
Beth Murray
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At the other end of the richly widening “youth” spectrum, Gus Weltsek reflects on the intersection of race, agency, and the embodiment of change in a university-student theatre group called the Emergent Theatre Project. Weltsek centers the work with youth clearly, but focuses on a brave critical analysis of his own morphing race-based identity, catalyzed by and feeding back into contested conceptions of social-justice theatre/drama work with youth. Several pieces link to classic drama/theatre efforts in schools with teachers and students, yet also interrogate the multitude of ways theatre/drama finds its way into the K–12 classroom, reinforcing that “how” matters. Jo Beth Gonzalez, a scholar and veteran high school theatre teacher, shares a reflective analysis fostering intentional wakefulness in her high school theatre ensembles. This orientation, at once reminiscent and immediate, leans into articulating ephemeral aspects of theatre work in a high-school setting over several years. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

准备一期《青年戏剧杂志》就像一项烹饪挑战,我很喜欢。任务?在别人家里,用已经有的东西准备晚餐。没有杂货店。没有借用的成分。没有走私香料。在别人的厨房里总是更有趣。编辑一般问题时也会出现同样的动态。《青年戏剧杂志》敞开大门。。。作家们慷慨地在我们的书架上摆放他们的作品。这部作品并不是为了适应特定的问题或满足特定的主题而创作的。相反,它反映了作者所提供的重要、相关和有价值的东西。一般性问题是一场大杂烩。有时,这个问题会成为一系列开胃菜,让读者能够在方法论、方向、问题和理论框架之间进行广泛的抽样。其他时候,这期杂志展示了主题的变化。。。学术上相当于煎蛋卷、魔鬼蛋、蛋奶酥、鸡蛋沙拉和蛋奶酥。有时,就像这个问题一样,这是一种令人愉快的秋葵。。。来自全球各个角落的成分和影响的混合物,当它们结合在一起时,创造了一种温暖和滋养我们的东西,但也美丽地代表了我们有争议的生活历史。本?弗莱彻?沃森和古斯塔夫?韦尔特塞克的作品活跃了被视为青年的范围的扩大。Fletcher Watson为他2013年的YTJ作品提供了续集,继续朝着“早期戏剧连贯理论”(TEY)的方向发展。FletcherWatson在为期两年的基础理论研究中,以26名TEY从业者的声音和视角,生动描绘了苏格兰TEY的图景,提出了一个TEY的戏剧模式,将其作为一种不断驾驭平等与完整之间紧张关系的形式。在丰富拓宽的“青年”光谱的另一端,Gus Weltsek反思了种族、代理和变革在一个名为Emergent theatre Project的大学生戏剧团体中的体现。韦尔采克的作品显然以青年为中心,但他专注于对自己不断变化的基于种族的身份进行勇敢的批判性分析,这是由有争议的社会正义戏剧/青年戏剧作品概念所催化和反馈的。有几篇文章与教师和学生在学校里的经典戏剧/戏剧作品有关,但也质疑戏剧/戏剧进入K-12课堂的多种方式,强化了“如何”的重要性。学者、资深高中戏剧教师Jo Beth Gonzalez分享了一项反思性分析,该分析培养了她高中戏剧合奏中有意唤醒的意识。这种方向,既让人想起又立竿见影,倾向于在几年的高中环境中阐明戏剧作品的短暂方面。Gonzalez将她的发现提炼为四类:呼吸、静止、社区和存在。Peter Duffy Beth Powers的文章探讨了戏剧/戏剧在各学科的一般职前教师准备中的作用。作者描述了使用被压迫青年剧院的力量、问题和可能性,《2018年青年剧院杂志》,第32卷,第1期,第1-2页https://doi.org/10.1080/08929092.2018.1451175
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Editor’s note
Preparing a general issue of Youth Theatre Journal is like a cooking challenge I love. The task? At someone else’s home, prepare dinner with whatever is already there. No grocery run. No borrowed ingredient. No smuggled spice. It is always more fun in someone else’s kitchen. The same dynamic occurs in editing a general issue. Youth Theatre Journal flings the doors wide... and authors generously stock our shelves with their work. This work was not created to fit in a particular issue or feed a certain theme. Rather, it is a reflection of what the authors offer as important and relevant and worthy. General issues are a smorgasbord. Sometimes, the issue becomes an array of appetizers that allow readers to sample widely across methodologies and orientations and questions and theoretical frames. Other times, the issue showcases variations on theme... the academic equivalent to a spread of omelets, deviled eggs, quiche, egg salad, and soufflés. Sometimes, as with this issue, it’s a delightful gumbo... a mixture of ingredients and influences from all sorts of global corners that, when combined just so, creates something that both warms and feeds us, but also represents beautifully our contested living histories. The broadening range of what-counts-as-youth is enlivened in Ben FletcherWatson and Gustave Weltesek’s writings. Fletcher-Watson offers a sequel to his 2013 YTJ piece, continuing development toward a “coherent theory of Theatre in the Early Years” (TEY). Chronicling a two-year grounded theory study, FletcherWatson paints a vivid picture of TEY in Scotland in the voices and perspectives of 26 TEY practitioners to forward a dramaturgical model of TEY as a form continually navigating tensions between equality and integrity. At the other end of the richly widening “youth” spectrum, Gus Weltsek reflects on the intersection of race, agency, and the embodiment of change in a university-student theatre group called the Emergent Theatre Project. Weltsek centers the work with youth clearly, but focuses on a brave critical analysis of his own morphing race-based identity, catalyzed by and feeding back into contested conceptions of social-justice theatre/drama work with youth. Several pieces link to classic drama/theatre efforts in schools with teachers and students, yet also interrogate the multitude of ways theatre/drama finds its way into the K–12 classroom, reinforcing that “how” matters. Jo Beth Gonzalez, a scholar and veteran high school theatre teacher, shares a reflective analysis fostering intentional wakefulness in her high school theatre ensembles. This orientation, at once reminiscent and immediate, leans into articulating ephemeral aspects of theatre work in a high-school setting over several years. Folding in and leaning on ideas from an eclectic range of fields, Gonzalez distills her findings into four categories: breath, stillness, community, and presence. The Peter Duffy-Beth Powers article examines drama/ theatre’s role in general pre-service teacher preparation across disciplines. The authors describe the power, problems, and possibilities of employing Theatre of the Oppressed YOUTH THEATRE JOURNAL 2018, VOL. 32, NO. 1, 1–2 https://doi.org/10.1080/08929092.2018.1451175
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来源期刊
Youth Theatre Journal
Youth Theatre Journal Arts and Humanities-Visual Arts and Performing Arts
CiteScore
0.60
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0.00%
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1
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