“Make a Difference.” “Change the World.” “Save the Planet.” More than ever before, college students are participating in service learning, community engagement and study abroad. We look for ways to affect global change, but in such a complex world, what does “making a difference” actually mean?
This presentation/workshop asks participants to consider the importance of “rehearsing change” before we try to enact change. Setting the stage in the Ecuadorian Amazon, we explore the conflict between local and global interests. Then, using Participatory Theatre exercises, we will engage a creative dialogue, exploring Development as story.
An educator, activist and artist, Daniel Bryan specializes in the use of participatory theatre as a means of education, empowerment and development. Originally from the United States, he has lived for the last 15 years in Ecuador, where he serves as Executive Director of the Pachaysana Institute, working with indigenous and marginalized communities in the Amazon Rainforest. He is also Instructor of Theatre at the Universidad San Francisco de Quito and coordinates the community-based study abroad program, Rehearsing Change: Empowering Locally, Educating Globally.
Co-sponsored by the Department of Spanish and Portuguese, the Department of Anthropology, the Performance and Politics Humanities Institute Working Group, and Honors and Scholars
For more info on Daniel Bryan, click
here: