Performing Resistance: the role of theatre and performance in 21st-century workers' movements
Lead Research Organisation:
UNIVERSITY OF EXETER
Department Name: Drama
Abstract
Theatre has been used as a tool for agitation and organisation in workers' movements for centuries, while movement activists have rehearsed, choreographed, and performed protests and direct-action tactics to achieve their political goals. Previous research has suggested that these strategies can be effective, and, in fact, that rather than an add-on or afterthought to political organising, performance is integral to the articulation and function of workers' movements. There is also evidence to suggest that as well as having an impact on specific campaigns, performance can help a movement cohere and endure, by generating ideas, feelings, and shared activities to build a collective consciousness and a way of life.
However, while a vibrant body of research on performance-activism has accumulated in recent years, so far, no in-depth examination exists as to how this pertains to contemporary workers' movements, specifically. There is also a disconnect between recent analyses of performance-activism and historical research on performance-based approaches of organised labour movements of the 20th century. This is despite the international labour movement continuing to evolve in challenging 21st-century contexts, whose activists acknowledge the significance of the creative legacies of their political predecessors on current campaigns. This study starts with the hypothesis that to gain a holistic understanding of how performance operates in the current political sphere, one must attend to these connections. Specifically, it examines how performance is currently deployed by labour movement activists in the form of agitprop theatre, direct-action tactics, and as a mode of political organisation, taking into account the historical lineage of specific approaches.
The Fellowship will provide me with the time, mentorship, and development opportunities I need to build on my prior work with trade unions and theatre-makers to develop this cutting-edge research agenda and solidify my position as an expert on labour movement culture. As well as examining significant protests and performances that have not yet received academic attention, I will bring to light underused and, until now, undiscovered archives, including personal and public collections. Project partners and an international advisory board are in place to support this activity and the development of a collaborative theory of performance in workers' movements that will challenge existing knowledge by centring the aims and expertise of those who produce it. A programme of activist-led workshops will illuminate how performance is folded into the day-to-day activity of groups working in the UK, Brazil, and India, pilot innovative research methods, and generate new knowledge and materials to build awareness of performance as it is harnessed for social justice. The workshops also have the potential to catalyse new practice in the field, and to influence labour movement policy.
Further training and support will enable me to create activities and resources to deepen disciplinary engagement with key themes, encourage cross-disciplinary exchange between scholars of theatre and performance, art and labour movement history, and political and social movement theory, and facilitate the engagement of people from various backgrounds with materials, practices, and debates. These resources include an academic monograph, a purpose-built, open-source archive, and a Teaching Enrichment Workshop for sixth-form students developed through the University of Exeter's Widening Participation programme.
I will gain leadership and management skills through the supervision of the PDRF, an activist-practitioner whose peer-reviewed article for a leading journal will make an important intervention in the field. The Fellowship acts as a launchpad into the next phase of our careers while creating an indispensable resource to increase access to and understanding of working class and activist culture.
However, while a vibrant body of research on performance-activism has accumulated in recent years, so far, no in-depth examination exists as to how this pertains to contemporary workers' movements, specifically. There is also a disconnect between recent analyses of performance-activism and historical research on performance-based approaches of organised labour movements of the 20th century. This is despite the international labour movement continuing to evolve in challenging 21st-century contexts, whose activists acknowledge the significance of the creative legacies of their political predecessors on current campaigns. This study starts with the hypothesis that to gain a holistic understanding of how performance operates in the current political sphere, one must attend to these connections. Specifically, it examines how performance is currently deployed by labour movement activists in the form of agitprop theatre, direct-action tactics, and as a mode of political organisation, taking into account the historical lineage of specific approaches.
The Fellowship will provide me with the time, mentorship, and development opportunities I need to build on my prior work with trade unions and theatre-makers to develop this cutting-edge research agenda and solidify my position as an expert on labour movement culture. As well as examining significant protests and performances that have not yet received academic attention, I will bring to light underused and, until now, undiscovered archives, including personal and public collections. Project partners and an international advisory board are in place to support this activity and the development of a collaborative theory of performance in workers' movements that will challenge existing knowledge by centring the aims and expertise of those who produce it. A programme of activist-led workshops will illuminate how performance is folded into the day-to-day activity of groups working in the UK, Brazil, and India, pilot innovative research methods, and generate new knowledge and materials to build awareness of performance as it is harnessed for social justice. The workshops also have the potential to catalyse new practice in the field, and to influence labour movement policy.
Further training and support will enable me to create activities and resources to deepen disciplinary engagement with key themes, encourage cross-disciplinary exchange between scholars of theatre and performance, art and labour movement history, and political and social movement theory, and facilitate the engagement of people from various backgrounds with materials, practices, and debates. These resources include an academic monograph, a purpose-built, open-source archive, and a Teaching Enrichment Workshop for sixth-form students developed through the University of Exeter's Widening Participation programme.
I will gain leadership and management skills through the supervision of the PDRF, an activist-practitioner whose peer-reviewed article for a leading journal will make an important intervention in the field. The Fellowship acts as a launchpad into the next phase of our careers while creating an indispensable resource to increase access to and understanding of working class and activist culture.
Organisations
- UNIVERSITY OF EXETER (Lead Research Organisation)
- University of California, Davis (Collaboration)
- Banner Theatre (Collaboration)
- Federal University of Rio de Janeiro (Collaboration)
- Queen Mary University of London (Collaboration)
- Trades Union Congress (TUC) (Collaboration)
- WCML Working Class Movement Library (Collaboration)
- Federal University of Ceara (Collaboration)
- Working Class Movement Library (Project Partner)
- Somerset Libraries (Project Partner)
- Reel News (Project Partner)
- Banner Theatre Company (Project Partner)
- Trades Union Congress (Project Partner)
Publications
| Title | Banner Theatre workshop 16/2/2024: Working Class Culture for a Change! |
| Description | Film of Banner Theatre's workshop on 16th February 2024. The film discusses the extensive history of the group especially their ongoing collaboration with the organised labour movement. It also documents a discussion on working-class culture and the use of theatre in different geographical and social contexts. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2024 |
| Impact | The film is being used as the basis of a chapter updating the history of Banner Theatre and focusing on their new international collaborations, some of which were strengthened through this workshop, as the film attests to. More impacts will be noted in due course. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oDBz41OuOmU |
| Title | Creative solidarity: Building an alliance of workers and climate activists |
| Description | A film of BP or Not BP's collaborative workshop with former Public and Commercial Services union officer and rep, on 6th November 2023. The film introduces BP or Not BP's techniques, while focusing on how their collaboration with trade union members has grown over time as both an organic and strategic outcome of their 60+ performance interventions to date. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | The workshop video contributes to broader efforts to strengthen alliances between climate justice and workers' movements by showing how the groups have successfully worked together in recent years, as well as how members from those respective movements learned from each other, and participated together in the workshop itself. This is an important resource as the climate crisis intensifies and workers' rights are eroded. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lojk1ng8vTE |
| Title | How to make Community Plays |
| Description | A short film of Salford Community Theatre's online workshop, which took place on the 6th July 2023. Although the workshop demonstrated the group's working methods and how and why these developed, it centered on practical exercises with the participants. It was the recommendation of the facilitators that the film should capture the final 10 minutes of the workshop only, which included performances by the participants based on their work together. There is also an audio recording of this section of the workshop, and images documenting the work undertaken (including a jamboard!) Unlike most of the other films created on the project this is only available on request. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | Verbal and written responses to the workshop were effusive and, along with the workshop itself provided material for a subsequent conference paper at the International Federation of Theatre Research and for a published chapter. |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/salford-community-theatre/ |
| Title | Jana Natya Manch workshop 26/8/2023 Performing Street Theatre: Themes, Spaces, Audiences |
| Description | Documentary film of Janam's online workshop, on 26th September 2023. The film explores Janam's hitoric and active work with the labour movement in India and other host organisations. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | The workshop has had a number of views on YouTube before promotion of the videos has gone out, indicating access beyond project participants. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9XOS-28RUPY |
| Title | Performing Resistance at the Working Class Movement Library |
| Description | A film documenting the following parts of the 'Curtains Up!' programme at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford on 21st September 2024: Talks/presentations: 'Introduction' - Nathan Godfrey (Working Class Movement Library Events Coordinator) & Rebecca Hillman (Principle Investigator of Performing Resistance, Exeter & District Trades Council Chair, Senior Lecturer in Drama at the University of Exeter); 'We Shall Overcome: Soundtrack of Anti Austerity', Pete Yeandle (Senior Lecturer in History, University of Loughborough, We Shall Overcome founder member); 'Picket line dramas: breaking off and walking out in the Royal Mail.' Dave Chapple (Chair of Bridgwater Trades Council, rep to the Southwest TUC, Caretaker of Somerset Socialist Library); 'Hamesha Saamida' Komita Dhanda (actor, writer, director and organiser for Jana Natya Manch since 2004. PhD scholar in the School of Arts & Aesthetics, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi); 'Artivisim with Tipping Point UK.' Clara Paillard. (Clara is a trade union organiser with Tipping Point UK and was a museum trade union rep for over 15 years. She has been involved in many worker struggles); Songs from Banner Theatre. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2024 |
| Impact | Please note this video is currently privately held on the project's Youtube site due to permissions needed from attendees who appear in shot. The video is available on request, and its impact will be updated in due course. |
| URL | https://studio.youtube.com/channel/UCplZnmhMzUuThBoLILt97kQ/videos/upload?filter=%5B%5D&sort=%7B%22c... |
| Title | Raised Fists and Helping Hands |
| Description | Documentary film of a workshop held by We Shall Overcome (WSO), Hull Trades Council, and The Station pub in Ashton-under-Lyne on 21st October 2023. The film shows how and why WSO was established and focused on how these three organisations now work together to create political music events to raise awareness of and money for those in need in various places in the UK. As well as sharing approaches towards a sustainable model the film gives viewers basic tools to begin setting up something similar in their own commuities. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop available on request. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | There are plans to show the film at trades councils in the Southwest of England to build similar links between the trade union movement and community-based campaigns as is demonstrated by WSO and Hull TUC. The film also captures a lively debate that took place at the end of the workshop on tackling food-poverty. This corrected assumptions about the interpretation/implementation of Foodbank policies, as well as offering new strategies to improve the reach and effectiveness of voluntary work. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JhNAdRYJgvk |
| Title | Theatre of the Oppressed/Landless Workers' Movement: Together for a Better World! |
| Description | Documentary film of the Landless Workers' Movement's collaborative workshop with Theatre of the Oppressed, on 12th December 2023. The film documents current activist's and theatremaker's commentary on how theatre emerged as a tool of resistance in the context of the struggles of the Landless Workers' Movement in Brazil and how it is currently used, focusing on the incorporation of TOTP techniques and training programmes, but also covering the diverse theatre practices used in the movement's history. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | Requests so far for the film have led to a new working relationship between the PI and Theatre of the Oppressed practitioners in France. The film also provided important research that formed the basis for a conference paper at the International Federation of Theatre Research in 2024, and for a book chapter. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qPsmmMDhABU |
| Title | Videoactivism: using film as a way to help win struggles |
| Description | Documentary film of Reel News' workshop on 23rd May 2023. The film demonstrates how video is an essential organising tool in winning disputes and struggles, both in the workplace and in the community, and offers tools for participants to use video to their own advantage. The documentary also compares three recent rank-and-file campaigns to show how videoactivism performs a completely different function to standard media coverage. These are the BESNA dispute of 2011, involving electricians; the Durham teaching assistants dispute of 2016; the current meTU campaign against sexual harassment and violence in the trade union movement. There is also an audio-recording of the workshop. |
| Type Of Art | Film/Video/Animation |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Impact | The film provides an invaluable 'how-to' source for people interested in using video for similar campaigns. The workshop on which the film was based was the most wide-ranging in terms of its international audiences, reaching participants in Africa, South America, India, and across North America and England. Reel News reported new contacts made as a result, and requests for the link to the film were received from both attendees and those who missed the live event. The film also forms part of the school's workshop planned by Reel News founder and the Principal Investigator. Further impacts of the film will be tracked in the coming months and years. |
| URL | https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=00lcF1ZuR-c |
| Description | Principal objectives of the Fellowship were 1) to reveal and understand more deeply how performance practices operate in workers' movements today in view of the aims and perspectives of people who produce and participate in them; 2) to document this by building resources to improve access to working-class political culture and performance as activism. This has been achieved by running 8 workshops led by activists in Brazil, India, and the UK; constructing an interactive website and database to promote and archive proceedings; disseminating research findings and case-study material internationally through conference papers and refereed publications; and designing a workshop for sixth-form college students in England. In the process, new research resources were created and identified, and the capability of the investigating team has significantly advanced. The activist-led workshops were delivered between May 2023-September 2024 by twelve collaborating organisations based in New Delhi, Rio de Janaiero, Marabá, Fortaleza, Birmingham, Bridgwater, Exeter, London, Salford, Liverpool, Hull, and Asthon-Under-Lyne. They drew regular audiences from Britain, South America, and Asia, and from Africa, Australasia, North America, and Europe for particular workshops. The curated programme, which reached over 200 audience members and sold out on a few occasions enabled researchers and the public first-time access to organisations who previously lacked critical attention (e.g., We Shall Overcome and Reel News), or who lacked sustained attention in theatre or performance studies (e.g., Movimento dos Trabalhadores Rurais sem Terra/the Landless Workers' Movement). It also provided deeper and updated insight into the practices of well-established groups (e.g., Janam, Banner Theatre). Each workshop, co-designed with the participating group, produced new and important in-depth knowledge on how forms of performance are folded into the day-to-day work of activists, or operate as nuanced activist tools in specific contexts of resistance. Encouraging fresh thinking and reflection on these aspects of organising also amounts to evidence, at an international scale, against the charge that political theatre and its application by the organised left is outdated or ineffective in the 21st century, or that interest in it is negligible. These findings hold significance beyond theatre and performance studies, finding relevant application, for example, in the fields of political and cultural studies, particularly where there is a resurgence of interest in political working-class culture. The workshop programme has also created a new practitioner-activist-network, in itself a major achievement both in terms of method and impact. Project participants worked together over 24 months, engaging in formal and informal sharing of practice and knowledge exchange. This consolidated budding relationships, and catalysed new ones, that have already led to independent collaborations beyond the remit of the Fellowship. By designing a responsive approach to creative collaboration-as-research that centres the expertise of movement activists, an international, cross-cultural community has been created. The value of methods developed on the Fellowship for other researchers has already been tested through papers delivered at the International Federation of Theatre Research (Manila, 2024), and for academic and non-academic audiences at the event Curtains Up! Celebrating Theatre's Impact on Modern Workers' Movements hosted by the Working Class Movement Library (Salford, 2023). Meanwhile, an article entitled 'Cultivating Coalitions through Performance in the Movement for Fossil Free Culture' for a special issue of Performance Research 'On Coalitions', and the book 'Performance & Activism in Workers' Movements: Organizing Resistance Into the 21st Century' for Bloomsbury's Agitations Series explore research questions and case-studies opened up by the Fellowship, for example, the role of international networks for promoting labour culture; the 'picket-line dramas' of Royal Mail workers; and the sceno-poetry' of Forteleza's Viva a Palavra. In addition, the research has already provided new links with the trade union movement to support the research of PhD candidates at De Montfort and Leeds. |
| Exploitation Route | Workshop participants (12 organisations, 29 facilitators, and over 200 audience members) form a network that remains active. Research and practice partnerships between academics and non-academics formed and strengthened through research activities continue to generate support and ideas for independent initiatives. Some activities have already taken place that are in turn drawing new cultural workers and trade unionists into the fold (e.g., performances co-hosted by Banner and Bridgwater TUC), while others are forthcoming (e.g., plans between the PI and Landless Workers' Movement for further collaborations; ideas for a volume co-authored by workshop facilitators reflecting practice undertaken on the Fellowship). Research findings and methods developed on the project can also be taken forward by anyone interested in incorporating social justice and democracy into processes of research, activism, teaching, and learning, and by researchers and students from various disciplines and backgrounds (especially in the fields of theatre, performance, film, cultural, labour and social movement studies, critical pedagogy, and social anthropology). This will be supported by publicly accessible videos of the workshops hosted on the project website and YouTube channel; the website itself (which, holds useful contextual information on the Fellowship, and is a buildable resource with the capacity to be developed into a general-purpose open-source archive system); new curricula at the Universities of Exeter and Queen Mary, London, based on research findings; publications based on research undertaken, which represent a landmark contribution to the study of political culture and performance, and how conditions of labour, marginalisation, and precarity, are creatively imposed and resisted. The single-authored volume for Bloomsbury is supported by AHRC funding that will make it publicly accessible online, for free, at point of publication. Sixth-form staff and students can benefit from project outputs going forwards, most specifically via the Teaching Enrichment Workshop co-designed with Reelnews and developed through the University of Exeter's Widening Participation Programme. Ready to roll out beyond the Southwest to enhance the Curriculum in Drama and Film at A-Level and promote creative expression, critical thinking, and diverse cultural exposure via the 'cultural education' initiative, it is also designed to support underrepresented UK-based students into higher education. |
| Sectors | Communities and Social Services/Policy Creative Economy Education Government Democracy and Justice Culture Heritage Museums and Collections |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ |
| Description | While it is early days and this section will be updated, it is possible to trace how the research is beginning to impact participants and audiences in public and third sectors as well as academic audiences. This includes influence on trade union activities where as a direct result of the Fellowship closer ties have been established between Exeter and other Trades Councils and Executive Committees in the Southwest of England, as well as new links with the West Midlands, and the largest trade union in the Philippines. In addition to policy at a local and regional level (for example, Exeter and Bridgwater TUCs' formal support of a PhD application on theatre and the miners' strike in January 2025), these connections, combined with the research undertaken pave the way for further influence on cultural policy and societal impact at the national and international level. Impact on political theatre practice has also occurred beyond the parameters of the project, for example, the application of the Theatre of the Oppressed Technique within a Just Transition campaign with aviation workers in the south of France, as well as in the 2024 French election campaign. The Fellowship has also brought about closer partnerships with Banner Theatre; between Banner, Janam, and Bridgwater Trades Council; and it has also introduced Banner to a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan. These relationships hold exciting potential for nucleating further practice and research, while Banner and Bridgwater have already collaborated independently twice, and the PI has been asked to advise on '50 Years of Banner Theatre', which will bring together policy-makers, artists, and activists to design strategy to support working-class artists and communities, in 2026, in Birmingham, Exeter, and Hull. The planned academic outputs reopen neglected areas of workers' theatre and working-class culture, and each has the potential for impact, as traced in the previous section of the form. Meanwhile, work is also emerging as a direct result of the Fellowship activities, which promises to support and consolidate this. For example: - a new international advisory board has come together via relationships forged on the Fellowship to develop the Open Book Publishers' new Applied Theatre Praxis Series; - a forthcoming article for a special issue of the Journal of Class & Culture, co-authored by the PI, and two project collaborators, speaks in new ways to performance andclass in the international labour movement; - an interview between Bridgwater & District TUC Chair, and a PhD candidate at De Montfort University supports new research on performance, trade unions, and anti-fascism; - an invited talk for the Cultural Bridge Partnership event "Act Your Age!: Youth Leadership in Art and Activism" (with FUNDUS THEATER / Theatre of Research (Hamburg) and Common Wealth (Cardiff) offers a unique opportunity to engage young people in Fellowship research; - an invitation for the PDRF to develop new curricula based on Fellowship activities, in Drama at Queen Mary, University of London, offers a new employment opportunity as well as new avenues for expanding the reach of the research. |
| First Year Of Impact | 2024 |
| Sector | Creative Economy,Education,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections |
| Impact Types | Cultural Societal Policy & public services |
| Description | 50 Years of Banner Theatre |
| Geographic Reach | National |
| Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
| Description | Open Book Publishers - Applied Theatre Praxis Series |
| Geographic Reach | Multiple continents/international |
| Policy Influence Type | Participation in a guidance/advisory committee |
| URL | https://www.openbookpublishers.com |
| Description | Strategic international cultural-political exchange |
| Geographic Reach | Multiple continents/international |
| Policy Influence Type | Influenced training of practitioners or researchers |
| Impact | Changed attitudes: Usually, workshops were accessed by people working or researching the area. Even then, political organisers reported a changed or deeper understanding on the role of culture in this activity, while researchers gained understanding of inner workings of workers' movements internationally. Members of the public with little prior knowledge also reported the learning from a range of diverse approaches as changing their perspective of workers' movements and art's role therein. Effective solutions to societal problems, including environmental sustainability: each workshop focused on how culture can play a part in addressing connection socio-political economic and environmental problems, via its application in or in connection with workers' movements. |
| Title | International labour-movement workshop model |
| Description | Through a combination of existent methodologies (e.g., Freire 1972; Canaan & Hillman 2016; Nicholls 2020, Freshwater 2003), and collaboration with workshop facilitators, and video conferencing software, the Performing Resistance project has tested a new approach to workshop design, participation, and educational exchange. It is a methodology constructed by and for people working creatively within the international labour movement, which seeks to amplify the voices of non-elites. The methodology is shaped by the fact that Performing Resistance workshop facilitators hold expertise in cultural work in the labour movement, specifically. This background brought knowledge of, for example, principles or techniques of democratic participation, oral history, applied performance, popular education, and other inclusive practices to bear on project activities, while the diverse conditions in which participants live and work provide opportunities for knowledge exchange. As well as the workshop facilitators, this is also about the networks used to promote the workshops and who turns up as a result (usually an international mix of labour-movement and climate activists, researchers, students, artists, educators, and community practitioners). However, as well as differentiated experiences, what also emerged was the significance of a mutual respect for and responsiveness to the *shared* political background of these facilitators and participants. Based on the workshops themselves, and participant feedback, this shared background (or sense of it) equipped participants with a level of mutual trust and understanding, as well as a common political language of sorts. This was especially useful given linguistic barriers, as well as the cultural and geographical diversity of participants who in some cases work in starkly different conditions of risk and precarity as artist-agitators. While such a result should not be assumed, or essentialised, and more theorising is needed before it is published (particularly against models of labour-movement organising and histories of cultural practice in the movement), it points to common experiences and networks that are currently under-researched, or that are nascent, and could be bridged by cultural historical threads (artistic and political) within a global economic and media system. |
| Type Of Material | Improvements to research infrastructure |
| Year Produced | 2022 |
| Provided To Others? | Yes |
| Impact | In an effort to honour and harness the expertise of the workshop facilitators, specifically, the workshop programme has been developed in close conversation with them; first as a group, and then individually. In this way, each workshop has its own distinct parameters, aims, participatory approach, even language (the MST and Viva a Palavra workshops were delivered in Portuguese with English translation) while each also responds creatively to the project's central questions, and consciously forms part of the programme as a whole. Meanwhile, the knowledge and background of workshop participants also influence the workshop design and, more directly, participatory aspects of those workshops (e.g., discussion or performance groups in breakout rooms). The particular collaborative approach impacted workshop design and the success of the programme as evidenced through ticket sales and participant feedback. Specific impacts of the workshops include educational enrichment for postgraduate students, activists and the general public. WCML feedback forms and emails to the principal investigator noted new working relationships between cultural activists and students who met at the event, and new activity among local historians and activists in Salford. The project has also provided the basis for forthcoming collaborations, including those mentioned in the sections of this form that talk about networks and impact. |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Banner Theatre |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Private |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Federal University of Ceara |
| Country | Brazil |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
| Country | Brazil |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Federal University of Rio de Janeiro |
| Country | Brazil |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Queen Mary University of London |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | Trades Union Congress (TUC) |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | University of California, Davis |
| Department | UC Davis Genome Cente |
| Country | United States |
| Sector | Academic/University |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Description | Performing Resistance Practitioners and Partners Network |
| Organisation | WCML Working Class Movement Library |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| Sector | Charity/Non Profit |
| PI Contribution | An international network of arts practitioners and labour movement activists, in the UK, India, and Brazil, has developed as a direct and intended result of the Fellowship. This has generated new innovative practice in the form of public workshops, offering spaces for developing specialist and non-specialist awareness of how performance and other cultural forms are harnessed for economic and social justice. The network is made up of project partners (the Southwest Trade Union Council, Working Class Movement Library, Somerset Socialist Library and Banner Theatre), practitioners (We Shall Overcome, Salford Community Theatre, Banner Theatre, Reel News, Jana Natya Manch, O Movimento Sem Terra, BP or Not BP, Stop Shopping Choir UK, VIVA A PALVRA), while it is also supported by/has created new links with individuals at Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi; Queen Mary University and University of East Anglia, UK: UC Davis Arts, CA USA; University of the Western Cape, South Africa; Uni Rio and Universidade Federal do Ceará, Brazil. The network established between project partners and workshop leaders has met online several times in addition to meeting during the workshop programme. We are also in touch as a group by email, and continue conversations about taking the work forward beyond the end of the project. Meanwhile, relationships with organisations, including Tipping Point UK, The World Transformed, and Culture Matters have emerged/been strengthened through the process, and a collaboration with Reelnews resulted in designing a workshop based on the project for schools in the Southwest of England. The network has also enabled new working relationships between Banner Theatre, Somerset Socialist Library and the Southwest TUC, and Salford Community Theatre, which has led to work with the Amazon Labour Union and is feeding into Banner Theatre's 50th birthday celebration supported by the General Federation of Trade Unions. Banner Theatre also met a member of Sangat Theatre in Pakistan as part of this collaborative process, and the possibility of a tour was broached. |
| Collaborator Contribution | The network established leading up to and during this project has fed into the planning and promotion of the workshops, as well as reflection sessions to feed into workshop programme design and other project activities, and advice and interviews contributing to written outputs. Partners, advisors, and new collaborators helped plan and host the project's closing event. This facilitated participants meeting in person for the first time, as well as a programme of talks, workshops, and performance with invited national and international groups, and local audiences. Reelnews collaborated on the workshop for schools, as well as their own online workshop. |
| Impact | 7 x 2-hour online workshops, which were filmed (multi-disciplinary - theatre, film, music, labour activism.) 1 x 4-hour in-person workshop at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford (talks at which were filmed). 1 x YouTube channel hosting the films: https://www.youtube.com/@performingresistance 1 x website collating, promoting, and reflecting upon activities: https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ 1 x published output and 3 forthcoming/in press (including two peer-reviewed articles and a monograph) 1 x schools' workshop designed in collaboration with Reelnews 3 x conference papers (at the International Federation of Theatre Research in Manilla, Philippines, 2024, and Class Concerns, Theatre, Performance, and Cultural Policy in the UK, 2023, Glasgow, UK) |
| Start Year | 2022 |
| Title | Performing Resistance Website |
| Description | Wordpress website that holds publically accessible information about the project aims, investigators, collaborators, workshops and other project activities. At the moment it is mainly operational to promote workshops, enable ticket sales, link to the Performing Resistance Youtube channel and collaborator websites, and facilitate communication between the general public and investigators. Parts of the website that could offer a more a more detailed archive of these practices and other similar practice is in development (and may be developed in a link to a connected Omeka site). |
| Type Of Technology | Webtool/Application |
| Year Produced | 2023 |
| Open Source License? | Yes |
| Impact | So far the impact of the project is mainly evidenced through successful ticket sales (with many workshops selling out) and communication from people who have found the website and are curious about the project. Emails received from postgraduate students and other interested parties seek conversation about the project or are interested in collaboration or accessing particular project resources. |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk |
| Description | Creative Solidarity: Building an Alliance of Workers' and Climate Activists - a workshop by BP or Not BP |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The purpose of the workshop was to engage climate activists and trade unionists - as well as students and other interested parties - in a) the work of BP or Not BP and b) how to build links across climate and worker movements. 23 people attended, including people from across the different target groups. After a presentation by BP or Not BP and a member of the Public and Commercial Services Union, participants discussed the strategies focused on their own initiatives, as well obstacles and opportunities for building a more closely connected coalition of activists. The workshop contributed to broader efforts to strengthen alliances between climate justice and workers' movements by showing how the groups have successfully worked together in recent years, and by providing space for members from the respective movements to learn from each other, and meet and participate in workshop activities together. The workshop also formed the basis of two further public-facing events: a workshop by Stop Shopping UK and a presentation by Tipping Point UK at the Working Class Movement Library in September 2024. These sessions engaged members of the public in new ways of thinking about and enacting political activism in their communities as evidenced in their feedback. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/bp-or-not-bp/ |
| Description | Curtain's Up: Celebrating Theatre's Impact on Modern Workers' Movements |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | This event took place at the Working Class Movement Library in Salford, in September 2024. The event sold out online, and 34 people attended in person, and a further 4 online (2 in India, 2 in Brazil). At the event theatre makers and labour movement activists in the UK, India, and Brazil gave talks and workshops on creative approaches to political organising and celebrate the culmination of the Performing Resistance project. As well as training audience members in specific approaches to using song, poetry and performance, the event sparked discussion, especially on how international and historical approaches might be used locally. Feedback forms indicated increased knowledge and interest in the area, and (almost uniformly) an appetite for more, similar workshops. The event generated plans for further collaboration and has resulted in long-term dialogue between people who met at the event, that has already supported postgraduate research, and an application for new practice research entitled The Past We Inherit, the Future We Build. The event was also filmed, and is uploaded to the project YouTube channel, reaching more audiences this way. Participating groups: Bridgwater TUC Exeter & District Trades Council Janam Stop Shopping Choir UK Viva a Palavra Banner Theatre We Shall Overcome! Tipping Point UK |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/curtains-up/ |
| Description | How to make Community Plays - a workshop by Salford Community Theatre |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The aim of the workshop was to share some of the company's key approaches to making political community theatre in a short presentation, as well as to give participants a taste of this through a practical workshop led by the facilitators. The workshop had capacity for 25 participants in ordere to facilitate group work, and was fully booked. The workshop sparked questions, discussion, and very positive feedback - with those in attendance reluctant to leave at the end! Facilitators and participants remarked on this having established a new way of working for the group, who had not before engaged an international audience online. Original practice was created during the session, which is documented in a video. Workshop participants and other interested parties have since been in touch with positive feedback about the session, and some participants became regular attendees at future Performing Resistance workshops. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/salford-community-theatre/ |
| Description | Performing Resistance Facilitator meetings |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | A formal working group, expert panel or dialogue |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Professional Practitioners |
| Results and Impact | Meetings - and emails - between workshop facilitators, project partners, advisors and investigators, to build mutual understanding of one another's work, and plan activity on the project, as well as connections for activity beyond the project's scope. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024,2025 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/team/ |
| Description | Performing Resistance Website |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | A website designed to promote, facilitate and record activity on the Performing Resistance project, as well as reach new audiences via films of the workshops that are linked on the website to the project YouTube page. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023,2024,2025 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/ |
| Description | Performing Street Theatre: Themes, Spaces, Audiences - workshop by Jana Natya Manch |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The purpose of the session was to extend Jana Natya Manch (JNM)'s international networks, educate participants on the group's history, current context, and approaches to political street theatre, and also to inform JNM's own members of different approaches/challenges of other political artists and activists different parts of the world. More than 100 people signed up to this workshop, mainly from India and the UK but also Brazil and other international locations. The online workshop was attended by 40 people, and sparked debate and discussion after a rich presentation of the company's extensive body of work. The workshop offered a rare opportunity for mutual sharing and learning of this kind. It strengthened links between Banner Theatre and JNM, and created new links between JNM and the Southwest TUC and activists/artists in Brazil - including artists active with the Movimento Sem Terra (MST). |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/jana-natya-manch/ |
| Description | Raised Fists and helping hands - a workshop with We Shall Overcome |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The purpose of the workshop was to engage trade unions, councils and policy makers, as well as students, academics, and the general public in discussion and debate around the practices of We Shall Overcome as a model for cultural activism, fundraising and addressing poverty in local communities. 25 people attended from across those different groups, and a lively discussion followed a rich round-table sharing of the group's work - both at the Unity Shop in Hull, and The Station Pub in Ashton-Under-Lyne. Among the audience were Foodbank volunteers, and in the discussion section of the workshop participants (including WSO facilitators) learned from them directly about how policies of that organisation are implemented differently around the country, while participants also considered how they differ again from WSO's own methods. There is potential here for the workshop/video to implement policy change at a local level in the voluntary sector, although we have not yet collected evidence to support this. WSO also contributed to the closing project event which drew together international participants and a local audience in Salford. New links have been established between Hull and Exeter & District Trades Council as a result of the workshop. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/we-shall-overcome/ |
| Description | Together for a Better World! Theare of the Oppressed and the Landless Workers' Movement - a workshop with O Movimentodos dos Trabalhadores Rurais Sem Terra (MST) |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The purpose of the session was to extend the MST's international networks in the labour movement and international artistic and educational networks, educate participants on the organisation's approaches to cultural work as political activism. The workshop was translated live from Portuguese into English. After a demonstration of the MST's dramatic practices and presentation on their history as an organisation, focusing on their work with Augusto Boal and Theatre of the Oppressed, the discussion opened up to discussions on ongoing struggles and questions and debate those present. The workshop was a very moving event given the tragedy of mST members having lost their lives in a fire at one of the camps a few days prior. The workshop began in a very sombre way, people acknowledged a shift in energy over two and a half hours of the workshop's duration. Participants expressed reluctance to leave the collective online space. So far, the workshop has led to forging a working-relationship with the MST including their collaboration on planning the WCML workshop that closed the project, an invite to Brazil for the MST's 40th Anniversary celebrations, and an open invitation to join the organisation for further research in future. New connections, followed up with an in-person meeting, with Theatre of the Oppressed practitioners in France. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/theatre-of-the-oppressed-and-the-landless-worker... |
| Description | Videoactivism: Using film as a weapon to win struggles - workshop by Reel News |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Public/other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The workshop was designed to engage trade union members, trades councils, students, academics, and the general public in Reel News's approaches to activist filmmaking and impart practical techniques for viewers to take away with them and implement in their workplaces/communities. Over 100 signed up to the workshop and over 50 attended, including from the UK, United States, Brasil, Australia and South Africa. Participants included groups and organisations as well as. individuals. The workshop sparked questions and discussion on effective creative approaches to political activism, as well as issues Reel News have focused on in their filmmaking - many of which are ongoing or have relevance for or connections to current campaigns. Workshop participants have since been in touch with Reel News and Performing Resistance for access to the film documenting the workshop, links to filmmaking software, and to learn more about the methods discussed. Some participants at this workshop also became regular attendees at future Performing Resistance workshops. On the basis of the workshop Reel News were invited to Devon Transformed in Totnes, June 2023, where their in-person workshop reached a further 30 people. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2023 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/reel-news/ |
| Description | Working Class Culture for a Change! -- a workshop with Banner Theatre |
| Form Of Engagement Activity | Participation in an activity, workshop or similar |
| Part Of Official Scheme? | No |
| Geographic Reach | International |
| Primary Audience | Other audiences |
| Results and Impact | The purpose of the workshop was to engage artists, trade unionists and trades councils, students and members of the general public - in a) the work of Banner Theatre, b) instigate debate on class and culture in the UK and beyond c) discuss how to revive links between political artists and cultural workers, and the labour movement in the UK, and d) to strengthen links between Banner and international artists/movement activists. 38 people attended, including people from across the different target groups, and from India, Brasil, Europe, and the United States. After a presentation by Dave Rogers on the history of Banner (now in their 50th year!), participants were split into groups to discuss working-class culture and how it features - or could feature - in their communities/workplaces. The workshop strengthened links between Banner Theatre and Janam in India, and has forged a working relationship between Banner and Bridgwater Trades Council, which has so far led to two additional performances to trade union audiences in the Southwest of England (seen by nearly 200 people in total and creating further links between Banner and Sangat theatre in Pakistan), as well as a joint excursion to Amazon picket-lines in the midlands. |
| Year(s) Of Engagement Activity | 2024 |
| URL | https://performingresistance.exeter.ac.uk/workshops/banner-theatre/ |
