Masterclass

Masterclass – “How the Theater of the Oppressed can help fight discrimination”

A Masterclass facilitated by: Maaike Berthoud and Elfine Radwanski

Unsure how to react to discrimination? Let’s rehearse!

Have you ever witnessed discrimination and not known how to react? It’s completely natural — fear, doubt, and uncertainty can be paralyzing. But silence enables oppression.

We invite you to explore how to break that silence through the Theatre of the Oppressed. In the second workshop of the Democracy Dojo, we will stage real-life situations to build the confidence and skills needed to take action and speak up.

🕰️ When? Tuesday, June 10, 6:00–8:00 PM, followed by a drink
🏃 Who? Led by Elfine Radwanski and Maaike Berthoud, for a maximum of 20 participants
🌳 Where? Rue de la Limite 21, 1210 Brussels

 

✏️ Register
Confirm your attendance by emailing [email protected] 

What is the Theatre of the Oppressed?

The Theatre of the Oppressed is a participatory form of theater developed in the 1970s by Brazilian director and activist Augusto Boal. It is not just a performance style, but a set of tools designed to **empower individuals and communities to recognize, analyze, and challenge systems of oppression in their everyday lives.

Key principles

1. Everyone is a “spect-actor”: There is no strict separation between performers and audience. Everyone has the ability to act and intervene in the performance.

2. Rehearsal for reality: Theater becomes a safe space to explore real-life situations of injustice and test out different responses.

3. Dialogue, not prescription: Rather than delivering a message or a solution, Theatre of the Oppressed invites collective reflection and experimentation.

How the Theatre of the Oppressed can help fight everyday discrimination

1. Making the invisible visible

It highlights subtle, everyday forms of discrimination (e.g., microaggressions, power dynamics in families, workplaces, schools) that people may not even recognize as oppression.

2. Empowering marginalized voices

It gives space to those who are often silenced to share their experiences and reclaim narrative power. This helps shift dominant cultural stories.

3. Practicing resistance

By role-playing oppressive situations and experimenting with different responses, people can rehearse ways to challenge injustice — be it speaking up, intervening, or building alliances.

4. Building empathy

Audience members experience oppression from different perspectives, fostering empathy and understanding across social divides.

5. Encouraging collective action

It encourages group reflection and problem-solving, which can spark grassroots initiatives or inform broader social change strategies.

The Masterclass: Experiencing the Theater of the Oppressed in practice

Imagine a scene where a woman is consistently talked over in a workplace meeting. In a Theatre of the Oppressed workshop:

  • The scene is acted out.
  • Audience members are invited to step in and try different ways of changing the outcome.
  • Others reflect on what worked or didn’t — and why.
  • Participants leave with new insights, confidence, and solidarity.

In essence, the Theatre of the Oppressed method is not just art — it’s a tool for consciousness-raising, empowerment, and social transformation. It helps people confront discrimination not with passivity, but with creativity, courage, and community.

This event aims to

  • make the invisible visible
  • empower marginalized voices
  • build empathy
  • encourage collective action

When

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