|
|
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/41601
|
| Title: | It’s Time to Act: Empowering ageing, sisterhood identity, and legacy transmission through intergenerational community performance methods |
| Authors: | Moya Pellitero, Ana Bezelga, Isabel Salazar, Daniela |
| Editors: | Gorgel Pinto, António Reaes Pinto, Paula Vicente, Sérgio |
| Keywords: | Ageing Intergenerational performance embodied heritage gender rights collaborative dramaturgy |
| Issue Date: | 19-Dec-2025 |
| Publisher: | Caleidoscópio |
| Citation: | MOYA PELLITERO, A.M., BEZELGA, I., SALAZAR, D. (2025). “It’s Time to Act: Empowering ageing, sisterhood identity, and legacy transmission through intergenerational community performance methods”. In P. Reaes Pinto, A. Gorgel Pinto e S. Vicente (Eds.), Cross Media Arts. Creative Assemblages for Social Impact. Casal de Cambra: Caleidoscópio, pp.129-140. |
| Abstract: | “Old woman? Who said that? We are still here!” is an intergenerational spectacle
that premiered in October 2024 in Évora (Alentejo, Portugal), and counts with
the participation of sixteen women on stage from 22 to 80 years old. Behind the
scenes, there is a multidisciplinary team made up of 15 members, all teachers,
researchers and students at the University of Évora. CHAIA is coordinator of this
artistic participative based- research, embedded in the project Age Against
the Machine: European Solidarity Network for Older Citizens Rights (2024-26),
co-financed by the European Union under the programme CERV (Citizens,
Equality, Rights and Values).
We engaged with an intergenerational group of thirty participants into a
dialogue valuing individual singularities and collective identifications through
sensitive listening, using participative theatre methodologies, and participative
artistic actions which helped us to build a collaborative dramaturgy. There has
been a political, ethical, social, and cultural dimension in our work, reflected in
a performance that reveals poetically and transversally themes such as ageing,
feminist care ethics, gender rights, embodied and performing heritage, the
re-signification and connection with the land and Alentejo landscape and the
deep relationship with the cycles of nature. This testimonial work of embodied
knowledge of past and present memories holds the pride of a process of
legacy transmission. The group was empowered through togetherness, team
solidarity, inclusion, and active participation, as well as through a process of
fearless curiosity, intimacy and sisterhood, with a sustainable long-term effect
on their lives and their close communities. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/41601 |
| ISBN: | 978-989-658-977-6 |
| Type: | bookPart |
| Appears in Collections: | CHAIA - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros
|
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|