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Publication

Drama and theatre for health and well-being

Wall, Tony
Fries, Julia
Rowe, Nick
Malone, Niamh
Österlind, Eva
Other Titles
Abstract
The rock art of indigenous communities from 20,000 years ago have been interpreted as early indications of how humans have connected performance, in a broad sense, with the health and well-being of their communities (Fleischer and Grehan, 2016). Now, at a global level, there is increasing recognition that drama and theatre can facilitate a variety of health and wellbeing outcomes for an extensive range of groups, not pre-determined by affluence or socioeconomic status (APPG, 2017). In a broad sense, drama and theatre are a constellation of arts based practices, processes, and spaces, which intentionally work with more or less fictive characters, roles, relationships, and plots, in order to generate a wide range of experiences or outcomes (Wall, Österlind and Fries, 2018, forthcoming). Indeed, theatre and drama have been described as “the most integrative of all the arts: they include singing, dancing, painting, sculpture, storytelling, music, puppetry, poetry and the art of acting” (British Medical Association, 2011, p 10), which can help people to understand and then change how they relate to and then live out their own world.
Citation
Wall, T., Fries, J., Rowe, N., Malone, N. & Osterlind, E. (2019). Drama and theatre for health and wellbeing. In Leal W. L. (Ed.), Encyclopedia of of the United Nations Sustainability Goals: Good Health & Wellbeing. Springer.
Publisher
Springer
Journal
Research Unit
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PubMed ID
PubMed Central ID
Type
Book chapter
Language
en
Description
Series/Report no.
ISSN
2523-3084
EISSN
ISBN
9783319956800
ISMN
Gov't Doc
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Additional Links
https://www.springer.com/gb/book/9783319956800