![Thick red velvet curtains, lit up with stage lights at a theatre](https://frontiers.csls.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/rob-laughter-WW1jsInXgwM-unsplash-700x395.jpg)
Photo by Rob Laughter on Unsplash
The Role of Theatre in Invoking Radical Empathy
by
Mark Phelan | 29 May 2024
![Thick red velvet curtains, lit up with stage lights at a theatre](https://frontiers.csls.ox.ac.uk/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/rob-laughter-WW1jsInXgwM-unsplash-700x395.jpg)
Photo by Rob Laughter on Unsplash
Episode Description
In this episode of Talking about Methods, Professor Linda Mulcahy talks to Dr Mark Phelan (Queen’s University Belfast) about the role of theatre in invoking radical empathy. He explains how playwrights and practitioners are effectively dealing with the legacies of political violence and traumatic history, and demonstrates their importance for public memory.
Sources Reccomended by Dr Mark Phelan
- Phelan, Mark (2016), Lost Lives: Performance, Remembrance, Belfast. In Post-Conflict Performance, Film and Visual Arts: Cities of Memory. Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 171-207.
- Video: Theatre of Witness: I Once Knew a Girl
- Smith, Anna Deavere (2019), Notes from the Field. Article/Podcast and Book