6533b855fe1ef96bd12b0721

RESEARCH PRODUCT

The school theatre as a place of cultural learning: the case of Soviet Latvia (1960s–1980s)

Iveta Kestere

subject

HistoryTheatre studiesTeaching methodmedia_common.quotation_subjectCreativityEducationVisual artsCultural heritageCultural learningTransfer of trainingMemoirPedagogySociologyCultural competencemedia_common

description

AbstractThe goal of this article is to reveal how through school theatre activities under authoritarian rule, changes took place in pupil knowledge, skills, attitudes, and behaviour regarding culture, namely, how the process of cultural learning occurs. I use a historical case study, specifically the case of the Valmiera School Theatre, which was the leading theatre group, not only in Soviet Latvia, but also in the entire Soviet Union. My primary sources are eight unstructured interviews, 20 published memoirs, articles in the press, theatre programmes, and photographs. One part of Soviet pedagogy was aesthetic upbringing, which was implemented through state-funded collectives, including school theatre groups. By participating in theatre activities, students gained knowledge of cultural heritage (literature, theatre, art, etc.), the ability to perform and acquire skills in other practical fields, and developed an appreciation of culture as a value. I argue that cultural learning through theatre was demonst...

https://doi.org/10.1080/00309230.2017.1307857