Ethnotheatre in a Prison Context: The performative Interview - Ricardo Seiça Salgado

Ethnotheatre is a critical world-making practice that combines ethnography, social knowledge and the performing arts. As an art-based methodology, it aims to research a common ground with a group of people to adapt these observations and knowledge to an aesthetic performance as the practice of participant observation, and the anthropology toolkit methodology.In the transition to the 21st century and the disciplinary areas of theatre, education, health, and oral history, ethnotheatre begins to be thought and conceptualised as practice and methodology.As a case study, an ethnotheatre project in prison wants to understand how inmates relate to and act about the problematic human conditions they experience. The research riddle was deciphering the mechanisms of resistance and control underlying inmates’ relationships in their confined lives. Using ethnotheatre as a performance of participant observation, we explore the perception and experience that young inmates have of the living conditions inside a prison to perform a theatrical performance about this passage in their lives.A text by Ricardo Seiça Salgadohttps://theanthro.art/ethnotheatre-in-a-prison-context-the-performative-interview/

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AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is an initiative of three applied anthropology organisations – Antropedia, Namla and Ambigrama – that aims to create an international platform for connecting anthropology and art, with the purpose of deepening awareness about inequality and our relation with the environment and driving change across three geographies: Romania, The Netherlands and Portugal, as well as beyond.AnthroArt – Action for People and Planet is a two-year project (2023-2024) co-funded by the European Commision, under the Creative Europe Programme (CREA).***Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Education and Culture Executive Agency (EACEA). Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.