Augusto Boal was a Brazilian theatre director, writer and politician. He was the founder of Theatre of the Oppressed, a theatrical form originally used in radical popular education movements.
His books are very influential. With 22 published works, translated to more than 20 languages, his views are studied in Theatre schools all over the world.
Like much of his other, inspirational drama guidebooks, Aesthetics and Theater of the Oppressed, Boal has a warm, humanist approach to what he does, as well as an effective method of getting other people to go to similar places. Here, however, he gives his readers (maybe just me in particular) too much of the whole spectrum for his vision, and it was way too frequent that I’d be blinded by some personal story or allusion, missing the point of any given activity. I am much more at ease with Boal in small doses.
For the most part, Boal is your typical anarcho-optimist, a conservative by virtue of the Utopian tautology underlying his supposedly decentralized artistic system. He employs, when needed, a dash of Freud, some Stanislavski and Lope de Vega, a two-dimensional Aristotle and a primarily iconographic Marx, cutting and pasting, organizing to his purposes a frightening monument built "in the hope that after the carnivalesque paroxysms of theatre will come once again the Ash Wednesday of a new day's work." Though fairly well organized, the argument far too often employs the shallow seductions of hokey linguistic devices as conclusions, a prime example being "the image of the real is real as image." Though charming in its anecdotes I fear it useful only to actors for its delineation of the games or techniques that Boal associates with his Theater of the Oppressed.
The original title for this book was supposed to be Cop in the Head but Boal's publisher said, "No one will buy a book called 'Cop in the Head.' You have to call it 'Rainbow of Desire.'" I fault it one star short of five because actually enacting the techniques described in this book are far more vital than the book itself, (and I'm just saying that because facilitating Theatre of the Oppressed workshops is what I do for work these days).
I was recommended this by a friend when talking about service design and facilitation and understanding often hidden meaning in what people want and desire and unlocking that. As a book for use in my professional life there are little things I will use, but general applicability is going to be a little limited. That's not necessarily a book problem but more a reflection on how useful this will be to me. That said, there are a range of techniques in here for helping people see things from different perspectives and that's certainly useful.
Boal's influences are interesting. He is a theatre director, a Marxist, and influenced by Paolo Friere's 'Pedagogy of the Oppressed' has created a 'Theatre of the Oppressed' and posits through shared improvisation, and involvement of audiences (spect-actors) theatre can be an effective form of therapy for the oppressed, to unlock what they really desire, think or find ways forward to problems.
It's certainly innovative and the book has a mixture of theory (which I did find fascinating, and in some ways will influence my creative writing) and the exercises with examples in practice. It's quite a readable book but I found many of the exercises quite repetitious or I wasn't clear what was really being asked. It's also notable that in the practice examples the subjects often broke the rules of the exercises which shows how influential the actors are as a means of working through things and also that the rules are guidelines at best.
I did really enjoy reading the practice examples of the different exercises and methods in action and I think I would value seeing them in person, or a video to truly get my head around them.
There are some limitations. The power of the Director is never sufficiently addressed, and whilst there is an assumption that the Director guides, in some of the text they are provocateurs, in others they are not. When dealing with oppression and power dynamics, especially as a form of therapy I don't think this book remotely addresses this challenge, and the influence the Director has.
Also, I think it would take a skilled facilitator and for those supporting this activity to be either skilled in drama and facilitation and also co-design. A lot of groups would need a lot of work to get to a point where they would be in a trusting and safe place to undertake these techniques. I personally don't feel they are safe in unskilled hands (like mine).
Interesting, for sure. Thought provoking, definitely. Usability - not really.
Adrian Jackson brilliantly translates Boal's complex, philosophical masterpiece on theatre, personage, and oppression. Boal relies heavily on devised words (like spect-actor), connotations, and metaphor, and Jackson captures these for the English speaking reader. Boal's book is more than just an explanation of the techniques of image theatre [especially Rainbow of Desire and The Cop in the Head, my personal two favorites]. The first third sets the beautiful foundation of humanity's interactions with and observations of self since the birth of consciousness, which is the basis for the creation of this new type of theatre, the Theatre of the Oppressed.