is watched in role by those who are not part of the prosecution improvisation.
 During the encounter the CSOs realise that the child in the family has cerebral
 palsy, which creates a new view point on the meaning behind the sentences
 in the transcript and whether they were referring to the condition or actual
 violence. The CSOs need to respond to this new situation on their feet.
 
Davis says that “the centre of the drama raises the question of whether or
 not social problems can be resolved by laws: does law lead to justice?”.4
 He aims to explore this question from within the story rather than in a more
 distanced reflective way. Besides emphasis on the internal coherence of tasks
 Davis identifies the ‘angle of connection’ of the participants to the story as
 a key component of his planning. In this case the drama was created for
 experienced teachers being trained in drama, mostly women and some men,
 many of whom had children; these adults were invited to play trainee Child
 Support Officers. The participants also were given space through specific tasks
 to build the fictional world and bring in personal narratives if they wanted to.
 These and many other elements helped in creating the sense of being in two
 worlds at the same time, the metaxis Davis explicitly aims for.***
 
He quotes reactions of some adult participants in the child abuse drama.
 One male participant said: “I felt I was two persons in one thinking about
 the conflict between law and humanity which rose up from the decision I had
 to make in the drama which was to save a child by the name of the law.”#
 A woman participant said: “I thought on the one hand as a mother and
 having a child and on the other as a child protection officer and in both roles
 thinking, how should I protect her?” Both reactions show a clash between
 the values of the participants in reality and the values taken on in the fictional
 role, suggesting a questioning of both. The final event of this drama seems
 to be constructed so that participants can become aware of how they were
 taken over by the ideology linked to their fictional task. In the other examples
 metaxis enhances seeing how the socio-political context influences people’s
 thinking and actions. Davis states that “drama needs to be able to involve us
 in such a way that we meet ourselves giving us the possibility of reworking
 the ideology that has entered us: the possibility of glimpsing how society has
 corrupted us”.“®’ In the Child Abuse Drama Davis creates a structure that