The National Cultural Foundation
West Terrace,
St. James, Barbados
246-417-6610
todayNovember 22, 2024
todayNovember 22, 2024
todayNovember 11, 2024
todayNovember 8, 2024
Arts & Culture - Literary ArtsNews
todaySeptember 27, 2021 134
Author and educator Dr. Yvonne Weekes has amalgamated her years as a cultural practitioner and invaluable knowledge of the Arts to produce a groundbreaking resource for Theatre Arts students.
On realising there was a void of academic material which reflects the Barbadian and Caribbean way of life for students who study Arts, the lecturer at the University of the West Indies Cave Hill Campus stepped forward and opted to produce the book: Voices: Monologues and Plays for Caribbean Actors.
The book, which was officially launched on Friday, September 23, via Zoom, offers students across the Caribbean and the world insight into the history of the region and what sets it apart from the rest of the world. The monologues were skillfully-written to highlight life in the Caribbean with many of the islands chronicled.
The publication is interactive with links to videos of live on stage performances. It also contains over 70 questions to assist teachers with analysing the texts.
Dr. Weekes said the book was long in coming since there was a lack of current authentic Caribbean teaching resources.
“A theatre graduate came into my office and told me that he had to prepare a three-minute audition piece for an NCF local folk concert, a production that commemorates the 1937 riots in Barbados.
“I gave him a text of monologues which I had purchased several years earlier. A week later he returned the book and with great dejection stated that none of the monologues spoke to him as a young Caribbean performer.
Dr Weekes added: “That same week David Edgecombe, a lecturer in Theatre at the University of the Virgin Islands and I, were discussing the state of Caribbean theatre. Ironically, he was lamenting the scarcity of scholarly and creative new works being produced by Caribbean playwrights and academics.”
“These incidents prompted me to take up the challenge of producing an actor’s resource in order to provide historical rich dramatic monologues for research and exploration of their Caribbean identity.”
She thanked publishers House of Nehesi Foundation Publishing, writers, editors and all who helped to make the book a reality.
The author offered special thanks to The UWI and the National Cultural Foundation for affording her much-needed financial aid.
Dr Weekes is currently in talks with the Caribbean Examination Council in order to get the book on their syllabus. CXC Pro-Registrar and Deputy Chief Executive Officer Dr. Eduardo R. Ali was present at the launch and accepted copy of the book virtually.
However, senior teacher in the Ministry of Education, Jamaica Shaurna Miller endorsed the book and praised it as a truly invaluable Caribbean effort and publication.
Head of Performing and Creative Arts Department, at UWI, Andrew Millington said the UWI is pleased to witness the completion of the book which he describes as “critical”.
“This piece of work to my mind is not just a simple example of creative expression, good writing, excellent research and vision but I want to press upon you the thought and the idea that this really is a monument to Caribbean civilisation. In terms of our nation-building process students now have a publication that they can peruse, that they can experiment with even on their own. The work is critical.”
NCF Marketing Officer Ashley Dyall said the Foundation did not hesitate to get on board when Dr. Weekes first approached. Dyall said it was important to ensure that students were given the tools that aid them in reflecting a true Caribbean aesthetic.
“The organic relationship between cultural identity and artistic creation has long been known to be a significant phenomenon in the shaping of our Caribbean society. It is a fact that the Arts, as products of not only creative imagination but that of documented Caribbean stories are fundamental to the understanding of our society today and as we continue to operate.”
Both The UWI and NCF lauded Dr Weekes for her identifying the void and then working tirelessly to fill it. The book is available to teachers of Theatre Arts in the E-book format while physical copies will be available for purchase at The UWI Book Source come mid-October. (PR)
[Ends]
Ple
Written by: Toni Yarde
labelArts & Culture - Literary Arts todaySeptember 24, 2021
It’s now the start of the Michaelmas school term and the National Cultural Foundation has two invaluable resources to add to the toolkits of parents, guardians, students, and educators. The [...]
labelEvents & Notices todayNovember 22, 2024
labelEvents & Notices todayNovember 22, 2024
The National Cultural Foundation
West Terrace,
St. James, Barbados
246-417-6610
Copyright 2024 National Cultural Foundation