Addressing racism and restoring justice: A theatre and education-based approach to community mental wellness

Author:

Chamblin Michelle1,Sarju Shalinie1,Wood Laura L.2,Uddin-Schmidt Nafeeza1

Affiliation:

1. Molloy University, United States

2. 0000000092155771Lesley University, United States

Abstract

This mixed-methods study explored the impact of a theatre-based community mental health and education initiative to address racism. Comparisons were examined between participants who either just saw a musical that centred on the theme of racism, or who saw the same musical and partook in a post-show experiential workshop that used restorative justice practices and drama therapy/applied theatre exercises. The results established that participants who saw the show and attended the post-show workshop (n = 38), in comparison to participants who only saw the show (n = 69), significantly (p = .001) agreed that the combined experience allowed them to reflect on biases and other forms of discrimination. Researchers also discovered that age and gender yielded considerable differences across groups. Additionally, there were five themes that were derived from the applied thematic analysis. Participants reported: (1) increased knowledge; (2) that they felt emotions; (3) that they connected with others; (4) that they experienced personal transformation in the here and now; and (5) that they were inspired to enact change. These qualitative themes supported quantitative analysis, which concluded that, while the theatre experience alone was impactful, the workshop augmented the central message and cultivated participants’ deeper reflections.

Publisher

Intellect

Subject

Literature and Literary Theory,Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Cultural Studies

Reference39 articles.

1. Mental health care among Blacks in America: Confronting racism and constructing solutions;Health Services Research,2019

2. Relationship between theatre education, applied theatre, and drama therapy,2017

3. Playback Theatre, social justice and empathy: A diffractive review;Applied Theatre Research,2021

4. Towards ethnorelativism: A developmental model of intercultural sensitivity,1993

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