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The Theatre of the Oppressed in Practice Today

Ali Campbell

An Introduction to the Work and Principles of Augusto Boal

Barcode 9781350445017
Paperback

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Release Date: 08/01/2026

Label: Methuen Drama
Series: Performance Books
Contributors: Caoimhe McAvinchey (Foreword by)
Language: English
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

An Introduction to the Work and Principles of Augusto Boal
This new edition illumines the context and key principles of Boal's work through a set of contemporary international case studies pointing to the living, core ethos of the Theatre of the Oppressed, and envisaging its possible futures with some of its leading exponents.

How has the work and legacy of Augusto Boal's Theatre of the Oppressed been interpreted and practised around the world? What does it look like in different working contexts? The second edition of this book provides an accessible introduction to the political and artistic principles Boal's techniques are founded on, tracking exemplary practice from around the globe.

Using detailed contemporary case histories, theatre artist, scholar and activist Ali Campbell demonstrates how the underlying principles of Boal's practice are today enacted in the work of - among others - an urban network (Theatre of the Oppressed NYC), a rural and developmental theatre organisation (Jana Sanskriti, West Bengal), Boal’s original company CTO Rio (Brazil), and a theatre-based group led by learning-disabled adults in the UK (The Lawnmowers Independent Theatre Company). The book concludes with a series of conversations between Campbell and international exponents of the work, envisioning futures for the Theatre of the Oppressed in the shifting political, educational and artistic contexts of the 21st century.

This second edition includes:
- A new foreword by Professor Caoimhe McAvinchey
- An additional conversation in Part 3 with artist and activist Tony Cealy
- A new Part 4, featuring creative encounters with groups of academics, artists, Indigenous activists and community multipliers from across the Amazonas region of Brazil
- A new Part 5, featuring the Indigenous academic and Kuringa (Joker) Annie Martins, who vividly addresses the challenges all practitioners face as they seek to decolonise their work