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[ecrea] storytelling and justice
Fri Apr 29 19:52:05 GMT 2016
*The Tenth Annual George Ewart Evans Centre for Storytelling Symposium @
University of South Wales, for more info and booking please visit our
website:
*http://storytelling.research.southwales.ac.uk/news/en/2016/feb/08/DS10/
*
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*STORYTELLING AND JUSTICE*
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*13th - 14th May, 2016*
*ATriuM, University of Wales, Cardiff*
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*Abstracts*
*Keynotes *
*Friday, 13^th May, 1.00pm - Dr Lina Dencik: *
*Title: From Surveillance Realism to Data Justice: Mapping the Snowden
Story*
Abstract: The Snowden leaks, first published in June 2013, provided
unprecedented insights into the workings of contemporary state-corporate
digital surveillance. Rooted in the everyday communication
infrastructures and platforms of ordinary citizens, the documents
revealed the entrenched nature of surveillance into citizens’ lives and
relations. However, almost three years on, what have been the social and
political implications of the Snowden leaks? What has been the nature of
public debate, policy outcomes, and types of resistance to the practices
of mass surveillance? In this presentation I will discuss how mass
surveillance has been enabled and advanced through policy and
technological frameworks whilst being justified and normalized in media
and public debate in the aftermath of the Snowden leaks. This has
manifested itself in the knowledge, attitudes and imagination amongst
ordinary people as well as those seeking to challenge and counter
surveillance. I identify this condition as ‘surveillance realism’, a
pervasive atmosphere that regulates and constrains thought and action in
which it has become impossible to imagine a coherent alternative to the
prevailing system. In such a context, I advance the framework of ‘data
justice’ as a way to articulate surveillance in relation to economic and
social justice rather than the limited techno-legal narratives that have
dominated data debates post-Snowden. I argue that such a framework is
needed in order to reassert the possibilities for another way of
organizing society.
*Saturday, 14^th May, 10.15am – Dr Marta Minier*
*Title: **Whose Child Is It Anyway? Whose Story? Whose Justice? : Notes
on the Drama of Custody Battles From the Judgement of Solomon to
Contemporary Documentary Theatre*.
This talk will discuss the dramatic complexity and polyphony of stories
centred on custody battles, from various versions of the child custody
story in mythologies, and the biblical story of the judgement of Solomon
in particular, to a contemporary dramatization of a child custody battle
following the break up of a multi-ethnic British family. Different
religions, hermeneutic traditions as well as schools of criticism throw
somewhat different lights on the biblical story of wise Solomon and the
two mothers fighting for a child. Still, much beyond its rich history of
critical and creative reception across the centuries, the story’s strong
resonance in an age when one might have two biological mothers thanks to
developments in medical science is unmissable. Even more so than the
only superficially straightforward case of the judgement of Solomon,
custody stories of our day are polyphonic stories with several agents
and several voices to be heard. How might converging and diverging
stories such as those of Sudha Bhuchar’s characters in /My Name Is/
(2014) facilitate ‘doing justice’? Whose child is it anyway? Whose
story? Whose justice?
**
*Sessions***
**
*Session One*
**
*Prue Thimbleby *
**
*Digital stories as part of a complaints process in the NHS*
A workshop with three case studies
She will show each story and present the reflections from the
storyteller and from a member of NHS staff. Then open it to the audience
to judge if the intervention (story telling) was successful and how it
could have been better.
We record the stories so that the NHS can learn and improve – but is it
working and how can we improve the process?
How can telling, recording and listening to the stories bring justice,
resolution and improved practice?
*Carlotta Goulden*
*Digital Stories for Justice*
Why we should listen to prisoner stories? (workshop and presentation)
Carlotta will present the work of her latest project, Stretch Digital.
This is a Lottery funded programme that takes digital storytelling into
prisons and criminal justice settings via the charity STRETCH
(www.stretch-charity.org) <http://www.stretch-charity.org)/>. Carlotta
has been to prison herself and has employed ex-prisoners to be
facilitators. (Fabian Spencer may attend https://vimeo.com/142049707).
In this presentation we will present the case for using storytelling
within criminal justice settings and different innovative applications
of the practice. We will discuss how storytelling can be a tool in
restorative justice and conflict resolution situations. We will also
look at how we measure the social impact of the work. Using Stretch
Digital as a model, we will look at ways of measuring the social return
on investment (SORI) – what indicators can we track to measure the worth
to the stakeholders; be it prisoners, prisons or the state? Can we
viably make a case for storytelling in the rehabilitation of offenders?
What is our rationale for these measurements?
Real moving stories of the unheard voices of prisoners will be presented
along side case studies of the ‘storytellers journey’ – the theory of
change – and how we measure the ‘good’ the storytelling process was.
*Session Two*
**
*Cath Heinemeyer*
*Young people’s voices in the policy process: must we tell our own stories?*
The experience of young people within the mental health system is
increasingly being regarded as a resource to tap in the quest to improve
services for them; ‘their voices must be heard’.
As Child and Adolescent Mental Health Services in York were being
recommissioned in 2015, an ‘appreciative enquiry’ was launched to obtain
the views of, among others, young people themselves. As the first round
of submissions was not considered ‘appreciative’ enough, I was asked to
work with teenage inpatients to work through digital storytelling to
obtain more detailed and considered input from them. The process of
developing the collective story was a departure from my usual practice,
which took myth and folktale as its starting point, rather than
explicitly dealing with young people’s personal experiences or illness.
While ‘The Story of Rob(y/i)n’ generated an output which was genuinely
valuable to the recommissioning process, it arguably fixed the young
people’s identities as ‘patients’ rather than ‘artists’, encouraging
them to use their personal stories as political capital.
This paper will address the use of the term ‘storytelling’ to frame
young people’s contribution to public discourse within narrow
parameters. I will draw on James Thompson’s critique of applied
theatre’s reliance on ‘trauma narratives’ and the ‘imperative to tell’;
also on Nick Rowe’s discussion of the value of ‘opening up’ people’s
stories. I will contrast the ‘Robyn’ project with more open-ended
projects I have led in the same setting, and argue for a more nuanced
approach to allowing young people’s voices to be heard in the policy
process.
*Prof. Ilona Biernacka-Ligięza*
*Students radio storytelling – the case of Poland***
Present-day media are all about motion and the visual culture, or it may
just feel this way. The culture of radio reception, called sometimes
the fossilized medium, and modern sound reediting proves otherwise.
There are many genres of radio and we can distinguish between different
channels, specializations or geographical orientation (local, sub-local,
national, global). The peculiar type of local radio is a student radio.
This type of radio is correlated narrowly with the University that
created it. The target in this case is the youth population aged between
19 and 24 years old (particular University students), the content of the
transmission including news, storytelling, music department and so on,
is in a large degree different from other local broadcasters.
This research used the case of: 1) “Radio Centrum” (University of Maria
Skłodowska-Curie) from Lublin; 2) “Sygnały” (Opole University) from
Opole; 3) “LUZ” (Wroclaw Polytechnic); 4) “Na Głos” (Jelenia Góra
College). Above cases of different type of schools local radio stations
have been chosen to show different forms of sound storytelling. Issues
embraced among many other have been correlated to the topics of local
music use, local information, students year organization and cultural
use of the radio and the city (in reference). The main interest is
connected to the art of storytelling, using sound as a medium. How,
exactly, radio broadcasters are able to tell a story about surrounding
word with sound only? Digital story telling in this aspect is an
opportunity for specified group of people (students) to tell their own
story concentrated on problems and creations directly from the mentioned
group. It is a way to promote students culture in the media stream, it
is a chance to fight for equality in the process of public
participation. A medial voice for students: their own way to express
themselves.
Schools chosen for analysis represent different profile of education:
general academic studies and professional studies. Moreover regions of
analysis were separated due to the urbanized level from highly urbanized
(with advanced IT sector) to the rural one (based on agricultural market).
This analysis is important in the era of Radio 2.0 (greatly adopted and
developed by the students’ radio), the distributions patterns, the
awareness of the convergence problem and the social participation, due
to high ration of recipient participation of discussed format.
The aim of our work seeks answers to questions such as the synergies
between online and local radio, audience participation, and community
affirmation in the terms of local radio use. The problem of
interactivity of the audience is also included.
To present complexity of the matter this research paper is based on
content analysis of mentioned broadcasters and sociological methods for
example interviews and survey for the recipients of analyzed formats.
*Hugh Griffiths*
**
*The Merthyr Migration Project*
**
Currently migration is a key voting issue for 46% of the UK public (and
THE major issue for 25%). However it has been shown that the general
public are not aware of facts about migration with 53% believing its
costs outweigh its benefits. Merthyr Tydfil showed the highest
percentage increase in Wales (+227%) of non-UK born population from 2001
to 2011.
The Merthyr Migration Project is intended as a record of the positive
effects that inbound migration from international Catholic communities
have had, and continue to have on the culture of Merthyr Tydfil and
seeks to challenge a number of recently emerging negative attitudes in
the general public. The project explores social justice through digital
storytelling (involving oral histories and participatory documentary),
historical research, digital archiving and communication and cross
generational approaches.
We focused on Catholic migration as Polish-born people now represent
Wales' largest group of migrants and through history Spanish and Italian
groups have also had a significant effect on the economic and cultural
development of the area.
The project was funded by the Heritage Lottery Fund and young people-led
involving fifty Year 7 pupils and ten Year 9 mentors from Bishop Hedley
School, Merthyr (where 22% of pupils come from ethic minority
backgrounds) as well as a number of community groups including Wales and
Marches Catholic History Society, Communities First, The Merthyr
Heritage Forum, Merthyr Library and St Mary's Church. Participants were
trained in digital storytelling techniques so that they could document
their changing attitudes during the project and record oral histories
leading to a series of short films functioning as a platform for
newly-settled peoples to tell their positive stories with a goal to
rebalancing public opinion, as well as an historic record.
The final works will form part of an exhibition at Cyfartha Castle
Museum & Art Gallery in June 2016 and through a range of digital
platforms including the People's Collection, Wales. This presentation
will give an overview of the project to date (organisation, examples of
films produced, project themes etc.) and will then discuss several
issues that arose (including participants responses to migration).
**
*Session Three*
**
*Colin Thomas*
**
*BLACKLISTED*
The story of film maker – and story teller – Paul Turner is one of
injustice. A film editor at BBC Cardiff, he was repeatedly turned down
for promotion to director. Only after investigative journalists from the
/Observer /did some digging did it emerge that Paul Turner – and many
others – had been secretly blacklisted by a MI5 representative working
inside the BBC. By then Paul Turner had left the BBC and become a
successful freelance director, eventually directing /Hedd Wyn,/ the only
Welsh language film to be shortlisted for an Oscar.
The presentation includes a short video telling Paul Turner’s story,
made with documentary students at Aberystwyth University. It includes
interviews with senior BBC managers who admit that they went along with
a system that they now acknowledge was unjust.
Paul Turner is now in the early stages of Alzheimer’s but it is possible
that he might be able to attend.
*Amanda Esons*
*The Ripple Effects of Digital Storytelling***
For this 20 minute presentation I will apply Maire Dugan’s /Nested
Theory of Conflict/ to exemplify how storytelling can fuel positive
social change. I will follow the stages of the process identifying the
source of change and how it interacts on different structural levels.
Within the Nested theory I apply the digital storytelling process
beginning with Individual/Issue to Relationships then Sub-Systems and
Systems. In integrating the storytelling process with this model, we
follow the story from individual to system. This application sheds
light on the interactions of systems and illustrates the potential that
story has to expand from micro to macro in effecting social change.
Text Box: Application of Story Issue = individual/identity Relationship
= workshop Sub-systems = community/organizations Systems = public
realm/policy
Within the *issue* and *relationship* sections of the Nested Theory of
Conflict I focus primarily on the lived experiences of the group of
participants from the digital storytelling workshops I attended. As we
move into the *sub-systems*, I look at organizational leadership and
address how specific issues realized in stories are brought to the
foreground. On the *systems *level, we follow the story to the public
realm. I look at how an individual’s story has the potential to create
change on the macro level not only by being viewed by those in power but
also by shifting collective consciousness. These reflections are based
on my perceptions of how the group has benefited from their own
experience of storytelling and how this experience influenced the
journey of stories gathered from the participants.
*//*
*Nested issue as empowerment*
The model suggests that development of story and voice is where an
individual may become empowered through the sharing of their personal
experience. This healing begins to take place as the issue is liberated
and placed in contextual framework. This personal healing is an
important first step in moving toward social change. Focus on
individual positive transformation is necessary to interact with
transformation on the macro levels.
*//*
*Nested relationship- empathy*
*//*
As everyone in the digital storytelling workshop is involved in the
process of both sharing their story and listening to others as they
share theirs, equality develops among the group and connections at a
core human level appear to form. Story circle moves the group towards
elements of social change as a new understanding might alter the way
that they view themselves, others in the group, and societal structures
that influence the issues that arise from peoples personal experiences.
This understanding can create a ripple effect as the stories do not
leave the room at this point but the understanding and insight will be
carried with the individual into their social interactions. The
connections formed during this process support the group as they move
into group leadership.
*//*
*Nested sub-system*
In working with the “Seven Steps of Digital Story” the group begins to
transition from the micro to macro level. Participants are challenged to
use concepts to think about the identity of the audience and what life
the story will have after its completion
**
*Nested system*
*//*
The system level in this particular application of the nested theory
represents a montage of the experiences, learning, and transformations
that have taken place during the storytelling process through the series
of workshops. This is where the created digital stories are shared with
people outside of the immediate group and begin their journey towards an
expansive, global audience.
**
*Professor Florence Ayisi*
*Looking at Ourselves: Audience Reception of /Sisters in Law/ in Cameroon*__
This presentation is based on a pilot film audience reception study
using focus group research In an African context. It aims to presentthe
findings of how a small group of audiences in Cameroon responded to, and
engaged with a social documentary film, /Sisters in Law/ (Florence Ayisi
& Kim Longinotto, 2005).Since its release in 2005, the film has received
critical acclaim as evidenced by numerous prestigious awards
includingthe *Social Justice Award for Documentary Film* at the Santa
Barbara International Film Festival (USA).
This audience study is based on the view that cinema audiences are
constituted in different ways based on cultural contexts and settings.
The main focus is to posit African audiences as cultural readers of a
transnational documentary film that reflects universal human-interest
stories. The global reach of film raises questions about cross and
intercultural constructions and interpretations of visual
representations of universal human-interest stories that connect
experiences and emphasise a local-global dialectic.The way audiences
interpret and make sense of a film is as important as the film text
itself in the processes of communicating meaning in film. What kinds of
meanings and debates are generated when an audience actively engages
with a film that reflects real issues? In particular, how do communities
or people who have limited knowledge of, and access to education about
their rights and matters of social justice respond to issues that
reflect realities that they can relate to?
The results present a portrait of differing reactions, and
interpretations based on the different socio-economic and ethnic
backgrounds of respondents; perspectives that reveal and question the
complexity of crime, punishment and matters of justice as perceived and
understood by different audiences located in the same time-space.
The presentation examines these findings from a neo-pragmatic
perspective, and the results ascertain a degree of “textual facticity
rather than infinite elasticity or malleability,” (King, 1998). Since a
film’s aesthetics is the first point of reference for spectators, this
paper also encompasses close readings of the film within a
cognitive-hermeneutical framework, considering notions of narrative
structuring.
This study is situated within the wider context of what Mahoso (2000)
calls a “valuable opportunity that allows the postcolonial ‘silent
audiences’ to explore their own consciousness, their own memory, their
own space”. In this context the conclusions will be expanded to a
media-political sphere. I argue that Ideological State Apparatuses
(Althusser, 1970) need to embrace more self-reflexive and pluralistic
practices, whereby the representation of postcolonial subject positions
becomes a conscious ideological discourse; audience agency in an African
context intersects general questions of media democracy.
**
*Provocations*
**
*Provocation One:**Prof Robert Smith and Prof SimonBurnett*
Professors Rob Smith (UWS) and Simon Burnett (RGU) will present several
interrelated aspects of their research work on UK police blogging. In
their provocation, Rob and Simon will discuss how blogging has been used
by UK police officers; the content of the blogs; and the potential and
actual benefits of those blogs and their associated communities. Rob and
Simon will also discuss the significance of storytelling within the blog
content, and the tension created by the personal and organisation
perspectives placed upon the blogs.
*Provocation Two: Dr Ananda Breed*
Dr Ananda Breed is Reader and Programme Leader of Drama, Applied Theatre
& Performance at UEL. She is co-director of the Centre for Performing
Arts Development (CPAD) research centre.
Ananda has worked both nationally and internationally as an applied
performance practitioner and researcher, contributing to several
important projects exploring the relationships between
theatre/performance and conflict resolution.
She has facilitated workshops for the UN Special Session for Children,
UN Third World Water Forum, and the NY City Hall Forum Theatre and Video
Initiative, and conducted research in Rwanda, Congo, and Burundi
regarding justice and reconciliation. Ananda served as lead facilitator,
consultant and curriculum specialist for the Youth Theatre for Peace
project located in Indonesia, Tajikistan and Kyrgyzstan. Currently, she
is working on a project for conflict prevention with UNICEF in the Osh
and Jalalabad regions of Kyrgyzstan.
Ananda has co-directed a participatory theatre project based on domestic
violence in Rwanda that was funded by Coopération Technique Belge (CTB)
in cooperation with the Ministry of Justice (MINIJUST) and toured
nationally. She has trained theatre practitioners in participatory
theatre methodology for Search for Common Ground in Bukavu and Kinshasa,
Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Ananda was a project member of In Place of War, a three year AHRC funded
project researching the use of theatre in conflict zones.
*Provocation Three: Christine McMahon*
**
/ “The goal of every storyteller consists of fostering in the child,
whatever cost, compassion and humanness, this miraculous ability of man
to be disturbed by another’s misfortune, to feel joy about another
being’s happiness, to experience another’s fate as your own.”/(Korney
Chukovsky)“
This talk considers the connections between restorative justice and
storytelling and asks the question,
‘Do storytelling and restorative justice have the same goal of
fostering compassion?’
Working both as a storyteller (with offenders and those at risk of
offending) and a restorative justice practitioner and trainer the two
subjects for me became intertwined. Questions emerged about both the
role of storytelling within the restorative justice process and the role
of justice within storytelling process. How can storytellers tell
stories to those who may not want them such as those in prison or those
at risk of custody and help to foster compassion?
The ability to tell our story in a way that expresses thoughts and
feelings is essential to finding resolution with someone we have harmed
or who has harmed us. Yet those who most need this skill and the
language to express themselves may not have had much access to stories
or the development of the skills that story listening may have helped us
to acquire.
Are the storytellers and their stories currently addressing this need
and if not how can we ensure they do?
*Provocation Four: Phil Morris*
A group of theatre-gamers sit crammed inside a people-carrier parked on
a rain-swept Newport backstreet. The driver assures us that we have
arrived at a ‘safe place’. We tentatively enter the rear-entrance of an
anonymous building where we are met by a dozen asylum-seekers and the
strong whiff of beef stew. We have just concluded a 30-mile trip as
participants in /Bordergame/ - staged by National Theatre Wales in late
2014 - which won the inaugural Space Prize, receiving £20,000 for the
development of innovation in the field of digital theatre.
For most of its duration, /Bordergame/ offered its audience a fugitive
immersive theatre experience, putatively based on refugee journey
narratives and involving actors playing shady people traffickers and
aggressive police officers. The piece culminated in a staged, albeit
unscripted encounter between audience members and actual asylum-seekers.
I reviewed /Bordergame /(as an editor of /Wales Arts Review/) and found
its ludic fusion of online gaming aesthetics and immersive theatre all
too often worked to trivialise the complex and politically sensitive
nature of the escalating human tragedy it purported to address. The
presentation of asylum seekers as a theatrical spectacle appeared to
fatally compromise the ostensible progressive aims of the production.
The formal innovations of /Bordergame/ were a problematic means of
exploring subject matter that demanded greater nuance, sensitivity and
intellectual rigour. Which raises the question as to how theatre-makers
should engage with refugee/diaspora communities in a creative process
that sufficiently prioritises the ethics of developing dramatic work
from the lived experiences of vulnerable people. The fates of individual
asylum-seekers are frequently determined by the plausibility and power
of their narratives - what ethical questions are posed by the
appropriation of these personal and painful narratives by theatre-makers
who stage them for public consumption?
This provocation invites a discussion as to how a less hierarchical
intercultural exchange might affect a more meaningful and ethical
dialogue between refugees and professional theatre-makers.
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