Post on 02-Jan-2016
Performative Autoethnography:
an epistemic framework for social change?
Marcia Braundy, PhDJourneywomen Ventures
CSSE, 2007
The Challenge
The central issue is how to bring together scholarship and advocacy in order to generate new ways of knowing that interrupt power imbalances (Lather, 1991, p. 110)
Initial Research QuestionWhat undergirds the fear that
produces in men the resistance and impedance to integrating women into
trades and technical training and work?
Expressing the findings through a performative autoethnography
opened up the possibility for an epistemic framework for social
change.
The decision not to use Augusto Boal’s Forum
Theatre
Boal’s model, performed in Canada by Headlines Theatre:
Audience Intervention taking on the actor’s roles and playing out a new story.
The decision not to use Augusto Boal’s Forum
Theatre
My concern:That rather than engaging in any
reflective practice relating to their own historical performances, the men would jump up to intervene and try to
“solve the problem”
Lynn Dalrymple’s (2006) analysis of the impact of applied theatre
In Theatre for Development in South Africa in the DramAidE projects:
• the notion of self-interest and improved life experience is a key
“…the declared agenda of most applied theatre projects…they are educational, therapeutic and meet the needs of poor and disadvantaged communities (204).”
On deeper reflection
Both Paulo Frerie and Augusto Boal worked to empower the Oppressed.
I was working to change the practice of the Oppressor.
The decision not to use Augusto Boal’s Forum
Theatre
My inclination:
I did not want to reproduce traditional
types of gender relations in my work
Affirmed by Paul Dwyer (2004) as he observed
Headlines Theatre
• Watching their play on sexual harassment, he counted the numbers and types of audience responses.
• Found that men made 52% of the interventions.
• But in 41 out of 48 of those, the men inserted themselves into the female roles to show them how they should act, rather than taking the place of the men to change the dynamic.
The Stop (Appelbaum, 1995)
The concept of “the stop” is a useful one: that moment of respite, alone with one’s self, in which to come to terms with the emotional impacts and reactions to performance.
The stop is not the negation of movement. It is movement itself, a form of movement away
from the entrapment of automatic and associative thought, just as it is a movement toward an embodied awareness. The stop is a
movement of transition (Appelbaum, p. 24)
The Goal
Reflexive Praxis.
The opportunity to experience the the act, observe the results,
reflect on what is achieved, and change the practice if necessary.
Performative Autoethnography
Ethnography: The study of people in situAuto: The self is part of the picture and
part of the settingPerformative: Using theatre as a method of
research representation to provoke a change in the social construct
Theoretical constructs
Performance as Epistemology:
• An epistemic framework for social change(Lather, 1986, 2001; Ellis, 2002)
• Performance as an action site of learning, (Fels, 1998, p. 30)
Theoretical constructs:
Data as Evocation
Performance-based re/presentation of research(Gray, Ivonoffski, & Sinding, 2002; Gray et al., 2000; O'Riley, 2003; Saldana, 2003)
Sharing the stories to evoke an emotional understanding (Ellis, 2000, 2002; Bochner & Ellis, 2002 )
Evocation
provides a ‘space between’ the text and the reader, the actors and the audience,
in which new knowledge can be created and/or integrated.
Even So
A performance authorizes itself not through the citation of scholarly texts, but through its ability to evoke and invoke shared emotional experience and understanding between performer and audience (Denzin, 2003, p. 13).
Theoretical constructs
“Theatre has the potential to present research material in a way that helps to clarify and transform social understandings; where insights occur because of the audience engagement with dramatic material, the potential for positive individual change is heightened” (Gray et al., 2000, p. 138).
Theoretical Constructs
bell hooks refers to it as patriarchal masculinity: men are socialized “to believe that
without their roles as patriarchs they will have no reason for being” (2004, p. 115)
Bob Connell calls ithegemonic masculinity:“Emphasizing the masculinity of industrial
labour has been both a means of survival, in exploitative class relations, and a means of asserting superiority over women” (1995, p. 55).
Theoretical Constructs
Patriarchal Masculinity:
Both women and men contribute to its daily
reconstruction and reconstitution
The initial research findings
Themes emerged:• Competency• Socialization• Breadwinner• The need to be essential• Sexuality• Fear of Change• The meaning of tools
Taking it on the road
Each time the first words spoken were:“That doesn’t happen here,” or “that came
from the mind of a very angry woman..”(even after they had been told that all the words came from
those in the interview)
Finally someone would say:Well, actually, just last week…”
The ultimate feedback was:“Maybe, perhaps we could use a seminar on
working with female tradespeople.”
The play, Men & Women and Tools (Braundy, 2002) is a pedagogical intervention into the social construction of gender relations at the beginning of the twenty-first century.
It is only a small step.
The potential result is still far in the future.
And takes its toll on the messenger