Students will be introduced to the practice of dramatizing ethnographic data. Three types of reality theatre are examined: monologue, dialogue, and ethnodramatic extension. Students will construct basic ethnodramatic works by scripting a monologue, a dialogue, and an ethnodramatic extension using ethnographic data they have collected.
A survey of ethnodrama and research-based dramatic writing. The course teaches students to express issues through the arts not from the artist’s perspective, but from the perspective of the subject: the people. The course prepares students to outline a one-act or full-length play based on the ethnographic research they have collected. In the subsequent course, Ethnotheatre, students begin dramatizing certain scenes from their play.
Students who study ethnodrama will gain the skills to conduct qualitative research for the purpose of writing and producing an accurate production. The course will aid the student practitioner in producing a good, solid work that holds up to secular scrutiny by incorporating the tools gained in this course and combining it with tools gained in the prerequisite course, Script Analysis.
The course will require Script Analysis as a prerequisite or corequisite, which will focus on the idea of hermeneutics. In Script Analysis, students learn about the playwright by reading the play. In this course, the students will consider how to learn more about their characters and their audiences by researching the play before writing it. In this sense, Ethnodrama is akin to searching the texts to see if these things are true (Acts 17:11). The course should cultivate a deeper appreciation for the Bible as a complete drama from start to finish, as well as its effect on its audience (the reader).
The course will provide the student practitioner with the skills to see everything in terms of script analysis/hermeneutics. It will also prepare the student to create new works that can be performed with the intention of connecting to an audience that is an evangelistic target by taking a realistic approach through researching the target subject, issue, and audience.
Context is an important part of this course, as students will be studying context: Students will learn how ethnodramas occur within the context of historical and social realism that is obtained through qualitative research.
Qualitative research such as ethnodrama allows for direct intercultural study, as students will have the opportunity to research the culture in which their subject matter takes place.
Christian drama and films are often panned by critics. Time spent in serious study of the play will also enable students to produce a quality production that will earn the respect of critics by giving students practical skills to produce good work. In this case, ethnodrama will prepare the student to produce a play that is based on actual research and therefore socially and historically accurate.
Theatre arts, by nature and definition, is an experiential medium. Students will be equipped to take the lessons learned from the course and apply them directly in their church or missional assignments.