Article Process Drama: Taking a Walk in Someone Else's Shoes
Process drama is an imaginative tool for non-arts teachers and students to explore issues and solve problems.
In this 9-12 lesson, students will analyze the setting, plot, and character development of Tennessee Williams’s play, A Streetcar Named Desire. They will discuss Williams’s craft as a playwright and his impact on American theater. Students will participate in a group reading and analysis of the play.
Students will:
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Books
Teachers should obtain copies of the play, A Streetcar Named Desire from their school collection or a local library. Preview the play by reading , and exploring the following resources: and , .
Students should read the , which introduces characteristics of Williams’s works as well as those of American playwrights in the mid-20th century. Have students read and discuss and .
Modify handouts, text, and utilize assistive technologies as needed.
Original Writer
Jayne Karsten
Adaptation
Jen Westmoreland Bouchard
Editor
JoDee Scissors
Updated
November 20, 2021
Process drama is an imaginative tool for non-arts teachers and students to explore issues and solve problems.
How theater and visual arts can help to engage your students to read.
Playwright Tennessee Williams was a master of theatrical lyricism. He wrote about outcasts who invent beautiful fantasy worlds in order to survive their difficult and sometimes ugly lives.
Take a peek behind the red curtain and discover the artistry and history behind the world of theater. Explore the playwriting process first-hand, learn about the cultural impact of performance, and read and perform some of the most influential works of the 20th century.
In this 9-12 lesson, students will examine the complicated dynamics of families inCat on a Hot Tin Roof, by Tennessee Williams, andLong Day’s Journey into Night, by Eugene O’Neill. Students will apply their understanding of thematic relationships to write a one-act play or play script.
In this 9-12 lesson, students will examine the impact of living in an early 20th century industrialized society through Eugene O’Niell’s play, The Hairy Ape. Students will analyze O’Neill’s portrayal of a world in which spiritual, communal, and behavioral values of the past have been displaced by the lure of technology, materialism, and patterns of cultural barbarism.
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