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What Is Drama Essay, Research Paper
What is Drama?
The question asked is ‘what is drama?’ Can we truly define it? Is there a
‘textbook’ definition of something that can be so personal? What is drama in
relation to theatre? Why is drama so important? What are its uses, its aims?
Some have said that drama develops self-esteem and encourages creativity
and imagination. This is true, and will be demonstrated through examples
from personal experiences. Usually the first thing that occurs in a drama class
is that someone will ask for a definition of the word drama. Most of the class
will look away, as if in deep thought praying that they are not called on,
because they do not know the answer. At first glance, it seems a simple
question, but as one begins to delve into the true nature of drama, the answer
is not so cut and dry. For some, drama is a type of television show, such as a
hospital or lawyer show. For others, it is that section of the movie rental place
where all ‘chick flicks’ are. For still others, drama means Sophocles,
Euripides, and Aeschylus. For teachers, drama means all and none of these
things. A clear definition is needed in order to lead the students in various
activities, and towards various goals. What good is it to have the students
explore within themselves if the teacher does not know what the aim or
direction of the exploration is? Many teachers claim that their purpose of
drama is to develop the child’s sense of self. This however is slightly vague.
Most people in education strive for this in one way or another. Bettering the
child in body mind and spirit is a general goal for teachers, so this idea is not
particular to drama. So then, what exactly is drama? There is one school of
thought that defines it as “an expressive process which is best understood
through the idea of symbolization and its role in the discovery and
communication of meaning”(McGregor 24). This is an accurate definition, as
it also goes on to explain that drama is ‘multi-faceted’ and that he child gains
experience through “voice, language, the body as prime means of expression;
and the associated media of light, sound and space”(McGregor 24). I have
had many opportunities to participate in dramatic activities, and to express
myself in different ways. One such activity I engaged in was a dance drama
while attending my final year of high school in Toledo. The song was entitled
‘Forever Young’ and it was about growing up and growing old without
knowing one’s place in life, without ever being happy. The melody was
almost regretful in tone, and the lyrics were pleading in nature. At this point in
time, I was two months away from graduation, about to leave the place I had
called home for five years. I was not yet ready to leave my youth and enter
into the unknown world of university. I was afraid, reluctant, and
introspective, much like the protagonist of the song. Through dance, two
other girls and I expressed our feelings on graduation. We used gentle
movements; always aware of the softness of the angles our bodies were
making. The arms were always curved, the head rolling into positions, as
opposed to jerking. The lights were dimmed, with only a pale, white light
focused on the center of the stage, giving it a bit of a glow. Since we had
three characters, we decided to act out three stages in life: the child, the
teenager, and the adult. The child was dancing in the center of the stage,
playing with the light, dancing with imaginary friends, happy, carefree,
oblivious to its surroundings, and interested only in the moment. The teenager
was standing just beyond the light of childhood, attempting to interact with the
child, but never actually crossing the light. She would circle around it, look
inward with longing, then turn with her back to the light, facing adulthood with
fear and trepidation. She would take a few steps in one direction, then turn
the other way, and take a few more steps, as if she were lost and confused,
like in a maze. She could always see the child behind her, but not the adult in
front of her. The teenager’s movements were mostly turns, implying
confusion, and constant changes of direction. The adult was seated on the
edge of the stage, watching the action. She began as an observer, as if
remembering her past, but as the dance continued, she would stand up, walk
around a little, then sit back down again, making good use of levels, but never
distracting from the main action. The adult was reminiscent; she watched and
reacted to the other two as if reliving her time as a teenager and her
apprehensions on growing up. We were expressing our fears and worries
through body movements and non-verbal expressions. Each of us had the
chance to play all three roles, so we could experience three different
emotions. Switching around like that allowed us to see the issue from different
points of view. After this experience, we all felt a little more at ease with the
transition we were about to make and ourselves. By expressing our fears, we
had overcome them. When developing one’s self through drama, there are a
number of things one can concentrate on. The first is the senses. By using all
of one’s senses, whether each by itself or all at once, one begins to explore
themselves and one’s surroundings in greater detail than ever before. One
becomes more aware of the physical world, i.e. the sound of the wind
through the grass, the taste of a hand, and this leads to being more socially
aware in the future. The senses are heightened, allowing the individual to be
more perceptive around others and therefore have better relations in the adult
world. Another aspect one can concentrate on is body movement and
non-verbal communication. We say so much about ourselves through body
language. If we can learn to control each part of our bodies and the
movements it may make, we can be more in control of our lives. How we use
our bodies is what we are most judged on by others. If we are aware of what
messages our bodies are sending we can manipulate these messages. By
performing such activities as mime, tableaux, and mirror imaging we can learn
to restrain any unnecessary movement and to make the most minuscule action
mean so much. Focus and concentration also plays a large part in drama.
Each person involved in the group must not only focus on what he/she is
doing but also on what the group as a whole is doing. It is only through
focusing on the tack at hand that any dramatic activity may be completed.
One must block out all outside stimuli and distraction and concentrate on
what is required of them. The rhythmic skipping exercise required the class to
skip in time to the music, to skip in time to each other and to follow the
commands of the teacher at the same time. Personal feelings are not the only
subject for drama. Drama can be used to introduce the student to a number
of different topics, be it historical, political, scientific, or artistic. A variety of
situations can be concocted, allowing the child to “explore his actual social
relationships at the real level, and an unlimited number of hypothetical roles
and attitudes at the symbolic level”(McGregor 24). By experimenting with
various roles in society, the child becomes better prepared to face these
challenges in the real world. As well, by allowing him/herself to experience
things as a different personality and by letting the imagination grow free, the
teacher is building up the child’s confidence in him/herself and the validity of
their own ideas and feelings. The child is now more perceptive to the needs
and feelings of others, having portrayed many different types of people. This
fits in nicely with Gavin Bolton’s definition of dramatic action as “a tool for
learning that rests in its capacity (1) to separate and objectify an event and
(2) to break down established concepts and perceptions” (142). At the
beginning of the course, we performed a few activities that illustrated this
point. By using all of our senses, or deliberating inhibiting one of them, we as
individuals were able to break down pre-established ideas about our
environment and our fellow classmates. The objective given to us was to
observe your own hand using all seven senses, i.e. sight, sound, smell, taste,
touch, beauty and humour. I had never before taken so much time to explore
any part of myself. In the past, I had always considered my hands as small
and wrinkly, in fact I find all hands revolting. To me, hands had always been
the filthiest part of the body, as they consistently were exposed to all kinds of
germs. My hands were especially ugly. I had crosshatched lines covering my
palms. During this exercise, I stared intently at my hands for a good ten
minutes, following the lines up and down the palm, taking detours on the
smaller lines; it looked like the road map of a large metropolitan city. I took
time to notice that my hands were soft and smooth, the pads of my fingers
were fleshy, but the bones of my fingers were pronounced and stiff. I noticed
the difference between the first joint of one finger I had broken and one that I
had not. When I listened to my hand, it sounded like the ocean. It was then
that I discovered that my hand was no longer a hand, but a seashell instead.
All along, I thought that my hand was ugly and useless, but drama had helped
me to overcome my prejudices to see that I truly had something beautiful.
This also occurred when I had the opportunity to compare my hand with
someone else’s. We told each other the story of our hands, and I actually
could see the tree and its leaves on her hand. We were using drama to learn
more about each other and to correct any prejudices we may have had
against the other. The other exercise we participated in also occurred near
the beginning of the semester. One of each pair of students was blindfolded
and the other had to lead them around the vicinity, exploring familiar territory
in a different light. I led my partner to the reservoir to walk through the grass
and to explore the stone walls along Elm. I had always considered the ‘res’ to
be a dangerous place; somewhere I should never walk through at night. This
time however, while leading my partner under archways and along the bike
path, I discovered things I had never seen before. In the alcoves, there were
large stone columns and intricate spider webs as large as picture windows.
We found a tiny ditch filled with beautifully coloured leaves running alongside
the field. What was even more wonderful was that she was discovering all
that I was, but without seeing them. When I took off her blindfold, she could
not believe where she had just been. My turn was next to be blindfolded. My
partner led me down Main Street to Elm through the long grass at the side of
the road. We then walked along Elm, taking a detour through the slight
embankment leading up to the apartment buildings. I felt a number of
seemingly foreign objects, including a bubble-like structure which I later
found out was a window, and some sweet smelling flowers. On a regular day,
I would walk by this area at least four times and never before had I seen the
things I had just explored with six of my senses. Drama had helped me to see
my surroundings in a different light, in fact without seeing at all. What I had
established previously as an ugly building with an overgrown lawn became a
refuge for Mother Nature in the middle of an urban apartment complex.
Drama had truly broken my preconceived notions to show something
beautiful. Drama is a very strong force in my life; it has determined the course
of my development as a child. It is unfortunate however, that drama has not
always existed in the way we know it as today. Agreed, throughout history
there has always been some form of dramatic expression, but drama as an
educational tool is a fairly recent development. In the early 1950s, a man
named Peter Slade wrote a book entitled Child Drama. The world was
changing; people’s perceptions were changing. Children were finally seen as
people who needed to be nurtured, directed, guided. Unfortunately, there
were still some groups who felt that the traditional outlook (drama with an
audience) was the way to go. Slade was advocating drama for personal
development. He stated that he sees “formal theatre as a final stage in a
child’s development”(Bolton 22). Many traditionalists extrapolated from this
statement that he was anti-theatre. He was not anti-theatre, he merely felt that
not all activities had to be performed; some were for self-exploration only.
He wanted to turn away from the formalised styles designed to make all
children sound like ‘little adults’ and turn back to the natural direction that
children wanted to take. Slade stood for ‘personal circles’ and ‘child-centred
activity’ and individualisation. It was not until Dorothy Heathcote came along
that the focus went back to the “importance of the collective experience and
in doing so brought again to the fore the possibility of group members
becoming united in their shared response to dramatic symbols”(Bolton 31).
Dorothy Heathcote concentrated on the material objects that the drama was
based on. She took a scientific approach; to her “the material objects of the
world provide the common source of” the scientist’s view of knowledge
(Bolton 59). Content is very important to her; the action must be focused on
some topic or object. The child will be aware of the object and by examining
and exploring it, he/she will celebrate it. Brian Way, another celebrated
dramatist, has a different view of drama and development from Dorothy
Heathcote. He is very close associate of Peter Slade, and hence their styles
are similar. Way tried to educate teachers to understand that children were
capable of more than just clowning around on a stage. They could reach into
themselves and explore feelings such as sorrow and pain. There are four
things that Brian Way concentrated on: (1) the individual, (2) exercises, (3)
expanding horizons of what may be included in a drama lesson and (4)
intuition. Some teachers who felt as if they had to train each child by itself and
who subsequently ignored the group unfortunately misconstrued his work on
the importance of the individual. Way included in his books a number of
exercises that teachers could use as a starting point for their classes. These
exercises consisted of instructions that the teacher would continually give to
the students which “put the teacher almost entirely in control, it also invites a
particular kind of mental disposition from the participants”(Bolton 48). He
also strove to include a number of topics into creative drama, in order to
teach the children about as many aspects of life as possible. He incorporates
all these ideas into one phrase, his definition of the function of drama:
“[leading] the enquirer to moments of direct experience, transcending mere
knowledge, enriching the imagination, possibly touching the heart and soul as
well as the mind”(Way 1). I believe that Way’s definition of drama is the one I
most agree with. For me, drama has always allowed me to become
characters that I would never play in real life. Play-acting has made me more
creative; I can use my imagination to its full potential, as I no longer feel
threatened by an audience. I have always found play-acting and other
creative drama exercises to be therapeutic whenever I was distressed. By
interacting with others in the group I have developed an appreciation for the
mind and for the spirit. My view of society has changed; each one of us has a
place in it, and it is up to the individual to define that place, however it is the
duty of the group to adapt to each individual. This is the only way to lead a
successful and happy life outside of the classroom, in the real world.
Bolton, Gavin. Drama as Education: An argument for placing Drama at
the centre of the curriculum. London: Longman Group Limited, 1984.
McGregor, Lynn, Maggie Tate, and Ken Robinson. Learning Through
Drama. London: Heinemann Educational Books Ltd., 1977. Slade, Peter.
Child Drama. London: University of London Press Ltd., 1954 Way, Brian.
Development Through Drama. London: Longman Group Limited, 1967.