Prefatory Note
1 These three research poems are included as part of an interdisciplinary dissertation project in theatre and curriculum: "Audience in Performance: A Poetics of Pedagogy of Spectatorship" (Prendergast). The study, to be published under the title Teaching Spectatorship: Essays and Poems on Audience in Performance, offers a curriculum theory that attempts to bridge what I see as the alienating abyss that lies between performers and their audiences in much of our contemporary North American theatre culture. The fourth wall is breached and broken down through the mediating influence of education as the teacher of pedagogy of the spectator facilitates meaningful drama-based activities (mirroring exploratory rehearsal processes), dialogues, and other interactions between students and performing artists.
2 Other poetry from this study has been previously published in drama/theatre and education arts education journals. However, it is my intention to elicit some reflection and response amongst my colleagues in theatre with the placement of these poems in this particular setting.
3 The longer poem raises the key problem addressed in my dissertation, which is reflected upon and responded to by the two poems that follow it.
Works Cited
Prendergast, Monica. Teaching Spectatorship: Essays and Poems on Audience in Performance. Youngstown, NY: Cambria. In press.
— . "Found poetry as literature review: Research found poems on audience and performance." 2006. Qualitative Inquiry 12.2 (2006). 369-88.
— . "Audience in Performance: A Poetics and Pedagogy of Spectatorship." Diss, U of Victoria, 2006.
— . "Prologue: The Theatre." Ethnodrama: An Anthology of Reality Theatre. Ed. Johnny Saldaña. Walnut Creek, CA: AltaMira, xiii-xvi.
— . "‘Shaped like a question mark’: Found Poems from Herbert Blau’s The Audience." Research in Drama Education 9.1 (2004). 73-92.
— . "Inquiry and poetry: Haiku on Audience and Performance in Education." 2004. Language and Literacy 6.2 (2004). N. pag. 18 January 2008 http://www.langandlit.ualberta.ca/archivesDate.html.
— . "‘I, me, mine’: Soliloquizing as Reflective Practice." International Journal of Education and the Arts 4.1 (2003). N.pag. 18 January 2008 http://www.ijea.org/v4n1/index.html.
— , and Carl Leggo. "Astonishing Wonder: Spirituality and poetry in educational research." The International Handbook of Research in Arts Education. Ed. Liora Bresler. New York: Springer, 2007. 1459-80.