How can we ethically engage with First Nations’ knowledges, stories and art to challenge the way we think about and compose performances using the dramatic element of ‘space’?
Warning — First Nations teachers and students are advised that this curriculum resource may contain images, voices or names of deceased people.
Unit details
Y7–Y8 DramaAboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Histories and Cultures cross-curriculum priority.
Unit overview
It can be easy to reduce the dramatic element of ‘space’ to simple blocking exercises, but it offers us so much more. This unit will support your students to draw on First Nations’ knowledges and stories to find different perspectives on using space in their theatre- making. By refocusing attention on the spaces between bodies and objects, students can learn to move their bodies into the liminal spaces and create connections and relationships between their bodies that may not have previously been open to them. In this age bracket, this may be a welcome relief as bodies can become a source of anxiety as they change and grow during puberty.
The unit contains a range of observational, physical and philosophical activities that will challenge the class’s perspectives on space. Students will also have an opportunity to think about how cultural appreciation can enhance their theatre-making, while avoiding the pitfalls of cultural appropriation.
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