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Critical Pedagogy and the Risks Associated with Performing Lifeworlds

Hughes, Gill; Cooper, Charlie

Authors

Charlie Cooper



Abstract

The following chapter discusses some of the key issues arising in performing research. It draws on a collaborative participatory action research project exploring the experiences of young people, who would be considered disadvantaged, in austerity England. The findings were disseminated through the medium of theatre that was also filmed. The project proved a success in several ways: giving some young people a voice they had not had before, building confidence and critical consciousness, and impacting profoundly on the audiences through offering a more proportionate insight into the struggles young people endure, under the impact of forced austerity to that found in mainstream media and political representations. However, the intent and actuality of this project proved, in the end, to be mismatched, suggesting that the co-construction of knowledge is complicated by power relations, trust, and the foregrounding of the crucial issues of ownership, consent, and control. Ethical problems arose in relation to committing some of the stories to film. In particular, the issues of anonymity were not fully thought through, and it was only realized afterwards that some young people’s well-being might be compromised by experiencing their essence drift into the ether of the Internet for posterity, crucially out of their control.

Citation

Hughes, G., & Cooper, C. (2017). Critical Pedagogy and the Risks Associated with Performing Lifeworlds. In Methodological Approaches (Living Reference Work) (1-21). Springer Publishing Company. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-89-7_24-1

Online Publication Date Jan 2, 2016
Publication Date 2017-03
Deposit Date Jun 8, 2022
Publisher Springer Publishing Company
Pages 1-21
Series Title Geographies of Children and Young People
Series Number 2
Book Title Methodological Approaches (Living Reference Work)
ISBN 9789814585897
DOI https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-4585-89-7_24-1
Keywords Participatory action research (PAR); Participatory appraisal (PA); Performativity; Young people; The “problem” of youth; Snapshot
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/497460