This article examines the different writing processes within a New Zealand intra-cultural community theatre project. Drawing on a practitioner perspec- tive I explore how marginalized minority community groups were able to write their own stories and discover a collective identity. In analysing this process I develop the metaphor of the midwife to conceptualize and theorize the role of the dramaturge. I use this case study to interrogate Barthes’s notion (1977) of the ‘death of the author’ and Bhabha’s argument (1994) about how some forms of multiculturalism can lead to political empowerment. In conclusion, I suggest that this multi-authored community project exemplifies the kind of empowerment that Bhabha describes
There has been an expansion of Indigenous theatre across Turtle Island in the last thirty years, as ...
This thesis highlights the ways in which the practices of contemporary midwives in Aotearoa/New Zea...
This thesis examines the construction of hybrid and fluid ethnic identity elements as produced by Mā...
This thesis explores whether an analytical practice, combining creative writing with activism and ba...
The theatrical review group Maranga Mai, emerging out of the political unrest of the 1970s, used dra...
Drawing upon interviews and focus groups with Asian migrants, this article interrogates responses to...
This article addresses the ‘My Stage’ participatory theatre project for women with an immigrant back...
Women have been at the forefront of devised theatre since it became a prevalent method of making in ...
Reflecting on the transformative potential of participatory theatre methods for social research, the...
Professional ethics and legal competencies require midwives practising in New Zealand to provide ca...
This essay draws on my own discoveries and current practices as an American theatre director and aca...
To write, for me at least, has been a calling. I set out to communicate a story that creates empathy...
Levy (1996, 367) says, The art of involvement discovers the current of music. How do we make a symph...
This thesis examines playwriting methodologies commonly used in community-engaged theatre practice i...
This thesis deploys both critical and creative methodologies to address the research question ‘How c...
There has been an expansion of Indigenous theatre across Turtle Island in the last thirty years, as ...
This thesis highlights the ways in which the practices of contemporary midwives in Aotearoa/New Zea...
This thesis examines the construction of hybrid and fluid ethnic identity elements as produced by Mā...
This thesis explores whether an analytical practice, combining creative writing with activism and ba...
The theatrical review group Maranga Mai, emerging out of the political unrest of the 1970s, used dra...
Drawing upon interviews and focus groups with Asian migrants, this article interrogates responses to...
This article addresses the ‘My Stage’ participatory theatre project for women with an immigrant back...
Women have been at the forefront of devised theatre since it became a prevalent method of making in ...
Reflecting on the transformative potential of participatory theatre methods for social research, the...
Professional ethics and legal competencies require midwives practising in New Zealand to provide ca...
This essay draws on my own discoveries and current practices as an American theatre director and aca...
To write, for me at least, has been a calling. I set out to communicate a story that creates empathy...
Levy (1996, 367) says, The art of involvement discovers the current of music. How do we make a symph...
This thesis examines playwriting methodologies commonly used in community-engaged theatre practice i...
This thesis deploys both critical and creative methodologies to address the research question ‘How c...
There has been an expansion of Indigenous theatre across Turtle Island in the last thirty years, as ...
This thesis highlights the ways in which the practices of contemporary midwives in Aotearoa/New Zea...
This thesis examines the construction of hybrid and fluid ethnic identity elements as produced by Mā...