Agit Prop Theatre - A Survey
Agit Prop Theatre - A Survey
Agit Prop Theatre - A Survey
the earlier modern plays deal with the predicament of human beings
institutionalized religions.
By the time modern play had evolved, the audience was swept to
enter and to go out the performance area a t their own will was
spectators etc.) started to think about the aim of their whole exercise.
They started discussing issues such as: What is the theatre for?
theatre.
cannot get rid of its inherent political nature. Agitprop theatres are
firstly and finally political theatres. They are not only simply political,
party was established in the early 1920s and was responsible for
absence of aesthetics.
dividing the action into scenes and acts. But in agitprop theatre this
make ups, sophisticated sound and light effects which mark the
simplifies the content and put more focus on the message. Unlike the
and increase of intellectual capital. The motto of those clubs was that
dare to offer them such exploitative wages. Poore traces the origin of
agitprop performances;
was it for? What should be its content started reverberating all over.
agitprop devise, i.e. the propaganda part of it. The upstage delivery of
and to indoctrinate the working class with the fact that the cause of
their impoverishment did not lie within the working class itself, but
Instead, they were trade union leaders. The performers too were not
professional artists but trade union activists. Audience too was not
drawn from the social elite, but from the working class.
clearly political. The long and argumentative debates were clearly mot
were useful for purposes of agitation, but they included no action that
various plays and recitals a waste of time, whilst the state authorities
new form for their purpose. This new invention was street theatre.
Russia only it took a new political dimension. It was here the flexible
(Right 6)
With this, another important phase in the evolution of agitprop
people and tries to change the beliefs and opinions of the audience by
agitprop drama.
oppressors. (17)
whereas agitprop theatre is the only form that will make revolutionary
change in the society (59).However there are purists like Arthur Miller
that, "If one can look a t the idea of 'social drama' from the Greek point
for one moment, it will be clear that there can be only either a
genuinely social drama or, if it abdicates altogether, its true opposite,
Even if social issues are addressed in conventional social play, its aim
interpret the social issues but not to overthrow the social setup that is
could not have the same vision of the world, for the
most of the agitprop drama prefers the arena type performance space.
time and a t any place. This spatial liberation made arena theatres
(Gassner, Producing 542). But this freedom of the space a s well a s the
engagement with the common people could slip into the production of
them aside and come to terms directly with the artist. (On
Theatre 111)
life and art, between spectator and art would be dissolved" (Brown
agitprop theatre: "I don't want to get holy about this when I say, the
the style of the actors as well as that of the author and producer
of Berlin (Lumley 93). In the 1920s this new mode of theatre was
Illustrated 395).
renowned Marxist thinkers like George Lucacs and Bertolt Brecht who
believed that art and literature should show the people the reality of the
were the common concern for the agitpropists all over the world. In this
America alone under the heading "Agitprop Theatre". This pretty long
Theatre, and the Red Ladder by Noel Greig, the Indian street theatre
agitprop theatres.
for the benefits of the elite and influential strata of the society.
always the aim: the best performance is the most effective propaganda
theatre" etc.
performance:
to the people.
attitudes.
'spect-actors'.
Performance is taken not as an end but a beginning of
incorporated.
termed as activists.
problems.
system underlying it" (02). In its attack against the corrupt elements
in the society the agitpropists have no time to dally with this kind of
20
pushing off its comfortable naturalistic pedestal into an
(Barucha xii)
and performance.
separate the performance and the protest. Street theatre took theatre
workers, a t the place of performance, takes things for granted till the
audience make them act out their given part in their natural temper.
performer. The boundary line between the audience and the performer
is absolutely erased.
people can be alerted of the wide spread common issues like official
the locality or time. Many times, theatre scripts are nonexistent. Only
mistakes. (22-23)
acting a play. By that time they might have contributed their 'acting'
share to the performance. Their embarrassment a t the realization of
the aim and politics of political action theatres. Their strategy includes
economically elite class, but for the working class. These populous
together.
arguments. But agitprop theorists like Boa1 has shown the world,
sociological perspective.
topical importance pushing it into total oblivion very soon after some
relentless commitment for social cause. It was this concern for the
form the traditional theatrical forms. Meanwhile Dario For resisted not
only. Planting his foot firmly on the stage, he dragged it to the workers
presence.
efforts were to erase the invisible line drawn between life and art. He
was of the view that life cannot be detached form art and vise versa
between life and art, and have indicated that this dream
space of the theatre into more public space; way from the