Viewpoints/Points of View: Building a Transdisciplinary Data Theatre Collaboration in Six Scenes

Author:

Snyder-Young Dani1ORCID,Arnold Mages Michael1ORCID,Bhargava Rahul1ORCID,Carr Jonathan1,Perovich Laura1,Talmadge Victor2,Wason Oliver3,Zellner Moira4ORCID,C-Dina Angelique1,Birnholz Ren1,Brockett Halle1,D’Ascoli Ezekiel1,Holt Donovan1,Love Sydney1,Belliveau George5

Affiliation:

1. College of Art, Media, and Design, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115, USA

2. Mills College, Northeastern University, Oakland, CA 94613, USA

3. Faculty of Theatre Arts, Western Connecticut State University, Danbury, CT 06810, USA

4. College of Social Science and Humanities, Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115, USA

5. Faculty of Education, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

Abstract

Data now plays a central role in civic life and community practices. This has created a pressing need for new forms of translation and sense-making that can engage diverse publics. Research-based Theatre (RbT) has proven to be an effective approach to delivering qualitative data to community stakeholders. We extend this tradition by proposing “community-engaged data theatre”. This approach translates quantitative data into theatrical language to engage communities in deliberative conversations on relevant issues. Community-engaged data theatre requires bridging multiple disciplines and involves creating new definitions and shared vocabularies in discourses that formerly have had little overlap in meaning. In this article, we share key insights from our initial experiments in which we adapted quantitative and qualitative data to devise a pilot piece in collaboration with a local community partner. In this essay, we communicate our collaborative process in polyvocal, artistic form. We edit and adapt materials from our conversations and creative practices into scenes illustrating how we taught and learned from each other about data science, participatory modeling, material deliberation and Composition to pilot our lab’s first community-engaged data theatre prototype.

Funder

Northeastern University’s College of Arts Media and Design Seed Grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference23 articles.

1. A Framework for Civic Conversations;Conference Proceedings of the Academy for Design Innovation Management,2019

2. Belliveau, George, and Lea, Graham W. (2016). Research-Based Theatre: An Artistic Methodology, Intellect Ltd.

3. Bertin, Bertin (1967). Semiology of Graphics: Diagrams, Networks, Maps, University of Wisconsin Press.

4. Data Theatre as an Entry Point to Data Literacy;Bhargava;Educational Technology & Society,2022

5. Boal, Augusto (1992). Games for Actors and Non-Actors, Routledge.

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