High Heels, Empty Bottles and Other Interesting Pedagogical Artefacts Mediating Social Movement Learning

Authors

  • Brent Franco Saccucci Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5186-9310
  • Bruno de Oliveira Jayme Department of Curriculum, Teaching, and Learning, University of Manitoba

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40559

Keywords:

arts–based research, social movement learning, transformative learning, embodied learning, queer pedagogy

Abstract

How does individual transformation unfold within social movement learning, a territory that mainly embodies learning as a collective practice? How do the visual and performing arts, as research tools, mediate such individual transformation while simultaneously promoting community engagement and critical dialogue amongst members of social movements and the general public? Interweaving social movement and transformative learning theories along with queer performance theory, this arts–based and participatory study answers these questions by describing and articulating two art interventions and the subsequent discourse and politics that emerged from these two scenarios. The first scenario unfolded during a series of painting workshops facilitated with members of the National Recycling Social Movement (MNCR) in 2017 in São Paulo, Brazil. The second scenario unfolded as a series of drag performances in Edmonton, Canada. By exploring the potentialities of visual and performing arts to understand social movement learning through the arts, people were asked to engage internal and external dialectical relationships that mediate their construction of visual and performative thought. Such creative thinking awakened a higher level of human consciousness, enabling individuals to construct new knowledge. This new knowledge empowered participants and enabled an agency which they later used to promote community development and social change.

Author Biographies

Brent Franco Saccucci, Department of Secondary Education, University of Alberta

Brent Franco Saccucci (he/they) recently completed his MA at OISE/University of Toronto and is now an instructor and PhD student in the Department of Secondary Education at the University of Alberta, where they research multiliteracies, research-creation, and cultural studies. He is also Adjunct Professor of Education at the University of British Columbia, a local drag queen, and stand-up comedian.

Bruno de Oliveira Jayme, Department of Curriculum, Teaching, and Learning, University of Manitoba

Bruno de Oliveira Jayme is a Brazilian visual artist and an Associate Professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Manitoba. His research interests and curiosities are around creative pedagogies, arts–based and environmental adult education, and how street art can be a pedagogical tool for possible dreams.

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Published

27-06-2020

How to Cite

Saccucci, B. F., & de Oliveira Jayme, B. (2020). High Heels, Empty Bottles and Other Interesting Pedagogical Artefacts Mediating Social Movement Learning. Journal of the Canadian Association for Curriculum Studies, 18(1), 99–100. https://doi.org/10.25071/1916-4467.40559

Issue

Section

Learning Theories