Synopses & Reviews
The book offers a compelling combination of analyis and detailed description of aesthetic projects with young refugee arrivals in Australia. In it the authors present a framework that contextualises the intersections of refugee studies, resilience and trauma, and theatre and arts-based practice, setting out a context for understanding and valuing the complexity of drama in this growing area of applied theatre.
Applied Theatre: Resettlement includes rich analysis of three aesthetic case studies in Primary, Secondary and Further Education contexts with young refugees. The case studies provide a unique insight into the different age specific needs of newly arrived young people. The authors detail how each group and educational context shaped diverse drama and aesthetic responses: the Primary school case study uses process drama as a method to enhance language acquisition and develop intercultural literacy; the Secondary school project focuses on Forum Theatre and peer teaching with young people as a means of enhancing language confidence and creating opportunities for cultural competency in the school community, and the further education case study explores work with unaccompanied minors and employs integrated multi art forms (poetry, art, drama, digital arts, clay sculptures and voice work) to increase confidence in language acquisition and explore different forms of expression and communication about the transition process.
Through its careful framing of practice to speak to concerns of power, process, representation and ethics, the authors ensure the studies have an international relevance beyond their immediate context. Drama, Refugees and Resilience contributes to new professional knowledge building in the fields of applied theatre and refugee studies about the efficacy of drama practice in enhancing language acquisition, cultural settlement and pedagogy with newly arrived refugee young people.
About the Author
Michael St Clair Balfour is the Chair of Applied and Social Theatre in the Faculty of Education at Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. His publications include Refugee Performance: Practical Encounters (2012), Performance: In Place of War, with J. Thompson and J. Hughes (2009), Drama as Social Intervention, with J. Somers (2006), and Prison Theatre: Theory and Practice (2004).
Bruce Burton is Chair in Applied Theatre in the School of Education and Professional Studies, Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia. He is the author of eight books in the field of drama and applied theatre.
Associate Professor Penny Bundy works in the field of applied theatre and drama education in the School of Education and Professional Studies at Griffith University, Brisbane, Australia.
Julie Dunn is Associate Professor at Griffith University, Australia.
Nina Woodrow is a PhD candidate at Queensland Institute of Technology, Australia.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Foreword by Erica Feller (Assistant High Commissioner for Protection, United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees)
Introduction
Settlement Stories 1 - voices from place
Chapter One: Creative ecologies: refugee settlement, resilience and the arts
Settlement Stories 2 - voices from place
Chapter Two: Co-constructing fictional worlds - a pathway to language development and resilience for newly arrived refugee children
Settlement Stories 3 - voices from place
Chapter Three: Managing conflict and bullying and enhancing language, socialisation and self - identity through Applied Theatre with Adolescent Refugees
Settlement Stories 4 - voices from place
Chapter Four: Belonging and becoming: integrated arts work with refugee youth and unaccompanied minors
Settlement Stories 5 - voices from place
Conclusion
Glossary
Bibliography
Index