Standing Ovation: Performing Social Science Research About Cancer

Standing Ovation: Performing Social Science Research About Cancer

ISBN-10:
0759101469
ISBN-13:
9780759101463
Pub. Date:
05/14/2002
Publisher:
AltaMira Press
ISBN-10:
0759101469
ISBN-13:
9780759101463
Pub. Date:
05/14/2002
Publisher:
AltaMira Press
Standing Ovation: Performing Social Science Research About Cancer

Standing Ovation: Performing Social Science Research About Cancer

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Overview

Is theatrical performance an effective way to communicate the results of social science research to health practitioners and the public? Ross Gray and Christina Sinding describe how their studies about metastatic breast cancer and prostate cancer were transformed into Handle with Care? and No Big Deal?, plays conveying the cancer experience to physicians and community audiences. People with cancer were among the actors, and the words they spoke were taken from individual and group interviews and from the dialogue between cancer survivors, researchers and dramatists that informed the script. The book tells the story of these two productions, outlining the theoretical basis of research as performance art, the process and problems of turning field notes into scripts, the delights and traumas of performance, and the results of research-based theatre experiments on audiences and participants alike. With the book is an 80-minute VHS videotape showing a performance of each drama.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780759101463
Publisher: AltaMira Press
Publication date: 05/14/2002
Series: Ethnographic Alternatives , #11
Edition description: BK & VIDEO
Pages: 208
Product dimensions: 5.20(w) x 8.50(h) x 1.57(d)

About the Author

Ross Gray is Co-Director of the Psychosocial & Behavioural Research Unit at Toronto-Sunnybrook Regional Cancer Centre and Assistant Professor, Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto. Christina Sinding is a social scientist with the Canadian Breast Cancer Foundation Community Research Initiative and a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Public Health Sciences, University of Toronto.

Table of Contents

1 Acknowledgements/ 1: And Now Introducing…/ 2: Social Science Meets Performance/ 3: The Meaning of "Metastatic"/ 4: They Had to Cry/ 5: Scripting/ 6: Stepping into the Spotlights/ 7: We Behaved Badly/ 8: Blocking Notes/ 9: Travelling, Unraveling/
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