Nora questions patriarchy in Bengal
In 2017 Jana Sanskriti was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for their project Nora questions patriarchy in Bengal.
In 2017 Jana Sanskriti was awarded an Ibsen Scholarship for their project Nora questions patriarchy in Bengal.
Nora questions patriarchy in Bengal
Nora questions patriarchy in Bengal aims to adapt Ibsen’s A Doll’s House to a Bengali context and address questions about patriarchy especially in rural areas that shows high prevalence of child marriages and trafficking due to the patriarchal traditions. The issues will be discussed through interventions using the method of forum theatre combined with local cultural forms. The performance will travel to 10 villages and interactions between actors and audience will investigate the definition of empowerment perceived in the play, interrogate the internalized patriarchy along with the question of using binary to look at things that does not take to the complexities of the problem. Seminars will be organized in selected cities with artists, theatre activists and women rights organization to compare the perspective of rural citizen with urban on patriarchy related issues. The dialogic dramaturgy and seeing theatre as an art of democracy will also be discussed.
– is the first exponent of Boal’s Theatre of the Oppressed in India, works among actors belong to marginalized community. The practice of Jana Sanskriti’s theatre is based on the belief that every individual is essentially intellectual and capable of thinking and understanding everything that happens around their reality. Jana Sanskriti’s theatre tries to make people understand this truth. Actors and spectators discover a thinker in them, an aesthetic experience which inspire them to grow as an active citizens in the society. With its 30 satellite teams Jana Sanskriti reaches nearly 200,000 spectators each year. It is seen as the long lasting largest Forum Theatre operation and the main point of reference in the world by global practitioners of Theatre of the Oppressed.