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022_000014/0000

Living Through Extremes in Process Drama

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Author
Bethlenfalvy Ádám
Field of science
Általános oktatás / Education, general (including training, pedagogy, didactics) (12831)
Series
Collection Károli
Type of publication
monográfia
022_000014/0021
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LIVING THROUGH OR LIVING THROUGH I will analyse some examples of LTD. Studying the practice of prominent experts of this approach will benefit the development of my action research. I will look at cases of Dorothy Heathcote’s work, and then at examples of how Gavin Bolton, Cecily O’Neill and David Davis developed the living through form. I will examine the differences between living through and other forms of drama, going on to define those components that show the strongest connections to Bondian drama. LIVING THROUGH OR LIVING THROUGH? Experiencing is a synonym of living through which is often used in describing drama. A book that argues for improving schools with drama quotes a student saying “drama is different from anything else at school because you get to really experience real life things and problems”;* in a publication arguing for using drama in teaching literature, history or languages claims it is useful because “the participants experience a number of scenarios, or ‘episodes’”.*” Winston and Tandy use living through as a synonym of experiencing when they state that drama “can offer valuable opportunities to place learning in real human contexts by making stories and living through them, rather than hearing them told by the teacher”.** But as an approach LTD comprises much more than experiencing. John O’Toole defines the LTD as “experiential role-play”® and states that it “is the dominant specific convention of form used in drama in education, the characters are living through the narrative synchronously”.# O’Toole puts the emphasis on the “it is happening to us here and now"" element of the living through form. Michael Fleming, in an interview for this research, describes LTD as “whatever is happening it is unfolding in real time".? Besides the immediacy of being in the fictional events, which is central in both definitions, he highlights the progression of the narrative, the importance of something being in change as participants are in it. Fleming offers a more detailed account of ‘living through’ improvisations elsewhere: 36 Patrice Baldwin: School Improvement Through Drama: a creative whole class, whole school approach, London, Continuum, 2009, 8. 37 Erika Piazzoli: Engage or Entertain? The Nature of Teacher/Participant Collaboration in Process Drama for Additional Language Teaching, Scenario, 6, 2012/2, 30. 38 Joe Winston — Miles Tandy: Beginning Drama 4-7, 3° edn., London, Routledge, 2009, 76. % John O'Toole: The Process of Drama; Negotiating Art and Meaning, London, Routledge, 1992, 136. #0 Ibid. “Ibid. 12 Michael Fleming: Michael Fleming interviewed by Add4m Bethlenfalvy at University of Theatre and Film Arts Budapest, 29 January 2014, Appendix D. e 21 e

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