Does formulating new research methodologies through art make sense today and how can they contribute to social democratization processes facing contemporary challenges?
Cultural animation was one of the first methods used in post-1989 Eastern Europe as part of the democratization process that started with the fall of communism in the region. Based on the British perspective of community arts, cultural animation worked with local communities engaging people in cultural/artistic projects, and believing that local involvement is the basis of a democratic society.
Today, cultural animators have their own congresses and institutions, the topic is researched and taught in universities, and it receives state funding. However, for over a decade this perspective has been undergoing a theoretical crisis, focusing more on practices than on conceptual development of the perspective. This is accompanied by the crisis of participation in arts. How to strengthen and reformulate the cultural animation methodology, so that it continues to enhance the processes of democratization of culture and does not contribute to social stratification?
For the last three years, I have been conducting research on the activities of the creative and research group "Pracownia", which is a pioneer of cultural animation in Poland. I engaged artists and scholars in research residencies. Based on my research I developed a new methodology for qualitative research through art, which I called the 6-Moves Methodology. This is a shift from animation understood as engaging in active action to animating a research attitude and critical thinking.
Open to New School community members only; must have a @newschool.edu email address to register
***
Suggested reading:
Maja Dobiasz-Krysiak, "More Than a Photograph: An Analysis of the Photographs of the Interdisciplinary Creative Research Center “Pracownia” Using the Six-Moves Typology in Arts-Based Research," in: Qualitative Sociology Review.
Presented by the Transregional Center for Democratic Studies (TCDS) at The New School for Social Research (NSSR).
The Transregional Center for Democratic Studies - TCDS’s transregional and cross-departmental research and study programs, conducted both at home and abroad, bring together civic-minded students, junior and senior scholars, and civil society actors from various regional contexts. Our activities — region-based institutes, workshops, conferences, talks, and fellowships — are designed to further strengthen social and human capital, i.e., individuals and organizations concerned with the promise and sustainability of democracy. Our flagship projects have been the annual Democracy & Diversity Graduate Summer Institutes (held in Poland since 1991 and also in South Africa from 1999 to 2015), aimed at a rigorous quest for a more textured understanding of the precariousness of democracy as it arises almost everywhere.
Committed to amplifying diverse voices, The New School offers more than a thousand public programs and events each year, providing fresh perspectives and unique learning opportunities. These lectures, exhibitions, concerts, and performances feature prominent and emerging artists, activists, and thought leaders. Be sure to visit our Events Calendar to see the full roster.
To receive updates about public programs and events at The New School, subscribe to our mailing list. Visit our Livestream and YouTube channels to watch select events live and recorded.
Maja Dobiasz-Krysiak Ph.D., cultural anthropologist. Assistant Professor at the Department of Cultural Studies at the Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń, visiting scholar at the Transregional Center for Democratic Studies in the New School for Social Research.
Currently carrying out the research project entitled “On the way to culture animation. An interdisciplinary research study of the Interdisciplinary Creative Research Center »Pracownia«”. A graduate of the Institute of Polish Culture at the University of Warsaw with a specialization in culture animation, where she defended her doctoral dissertation. Author of three research monographs and articles in Polish, English and German, published, among others, by Routledge.