Frequent Praxis Theatre and Theatre Centre collaborator Laura Nanni is working with The Banff Centre to host a live screening of Civil Debates 4 – Climate Change.
We’re thrilled to expand the reach of the conversation across the country. Civil Debates will be working with Laura to ensure a few of the tweets that come in from Banff will be included in the “Questions from the Floor” section of the debate.
Monday December 14, 730PM EST / 530PM MST
IN BANFF
Jeanne and Peter Lougheed Building @ The Banff Centre, Room 204
Banff FB Invite
IN TORONTO
@ Theatre Centre, 1115 Queen Street West, Admission PWYW (Pay What You Want)
TO FB Invite
ON PERISCOPE
via @PraxisTheatre
The Resolution:
A carbon-based economy is destroying life on the planet. Therefore:
Be It Resolved That it is unethical for arts organizations to accept funds from corporations causing this destruction and these revenue sources should be phased out.
Debate Format
Side A1 10 minutes
Side B1 10 minutes
Side A2 10 minutes
Side B2 13 minutes
Side A1 3 minutes
Questions from Floor: 25 Minutes
Audience Participation:
Following the debate, the floor will be opened to 2-minute comments or questions from the floor. If a question is directed at a debater, that person will have 2 minutes to answer. This will last 25 minutes maximum.
Attendees will be asked to register their opinion on their way in and out by secret ballot – to see if the debate shifted informed thought.
As always, and as the name implies, these debates will be civil and we invite apply your friendly intellect to a rigorous discussion of complex ideas.
Why We Started Civil Debates
Co-produced by Praxis Theatre and The Theatre Centre, Civil Debates was originally launched in 2013 as an opportunity to extend the online community Praxis Theatre had developed over the years via praxistheatre.com. Within a face-to-face setting, we worked to bring those conversations into a physical space. We were enthused and encouraged by the intelligent and civil discourse that had developed online, particularly in the comments of posts about hot button issues.
We began to think that – as theatre companies – we should be doing this live in a space with human bodies.
And so, building on the success of our three previous debates on Creative Cities, Arts Boards and Idle No More – Praxis Theatre and The Theatre Centre’s Civil Debates returns at conclusion of the United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris with a debate on the ethics of receiving arts funding from drivers of climate change.
#CivilDebates 3: Idle No More will include a discussion of 21 controversial statements our speakers have submitted anonymously.
These will inform the section of #CivilDebates 3 that invites audience members to participate through a two minute response to any of the statements.
Read more about the Format and Speakers in #CivilDebates 3: Idle No More
Here’s a preview of 5 / 21 controversial statements:
How do we address things like this?
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Electing a new, different government (Liberal, NDP, etc.) will not change the Canadian-First Nations relationship.
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Idle No More has been an urban movement.
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Harper lied in the apology.
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Confrontation is likely the key to any real change.
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The Indian Act is illegal legislation.
Debate 3: Idle No More
June 18, 2013; doors 7pm, debates 7.30pm
The Theatre Centre Pop-Up, 1095 Queen St. West, at Dovercourt
PWYC at the door. No RSVP required.
Hashtag: #CivilDebates
Click here for more information about the Civil Debates series in partnership between The Theatre Centre & Praxis Theatre.
#CivilDebates 3: Idle No More is Tuesday June 18 @ 730pm in The Theatre Centre Pop Up – Queen St. W @ Dovercourt
After rigorous debate on Creative Cities theories and the Role of Arts Boards, we’re excited to announce the speakers for #CivilDebates 3: Idle No More.
Resolution to be addressed:
The issues that created the Idle No More movement require extreme methods to achieve change.
Speakers:
Yvette Nolan (Algonquin) is a playwright, dramaturg and director. Her plays include BLADE, Job’s Wife, Video, Annie Mae’s Movement, Scattering Jake, from thine eyes, Ham and the Ram, The Unplugging, The Birds (a modern adaptation of Aristophanes’ comedy. She is the editor of Beyond the Pale: Dramatic Writing from First Nations Writers and Writers of Colour, and of Refractions: Solo, with Donna-Michelle St Bernard.
Directing credits include Justice, Café Daughter (Gwaandak Theatre), Tombs of the Vanishing Indian, Salt Baby, A Very Polite Genocide, Death of a Chief, Tales of An Urban Indian, The Unnatural and Accidental Women, Annie Mae’s Movement (Native Earth), The Ecstasy of Rita Joe (Western Canada Theatre/National Arts Centre), The Only Good Indian…, The Triple Truth (Turtle Gals). From 2003-2011, she served as Artistic Director of Native Earth Performing Arts, Canada’s oldest professional Aboriginal theatre. She is currently working on a book on Native theatre in Canada.
Hayden King is Pottawatomi and Ojibwe from Gchimnissing (Christian Island) in Huronia, Ontario.
He is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Politics at Ryerson University.
In addition to work in the academy, Hayden has served as the Senior Policy Adviser to the Ontario Minister of Aboriginal Affairs, Director of Research for the Canadian Council for Aboriginal Business, Scholar-in-Residence for the Conference Board of Canada and Governance Consultant to BeausoleilFirst Nation.
Follow Hayden on twitter: @Hayden_King
Wanda Nanibush is an Anishinabe-kwe mother, curator, image and word warrior from Beausoleil First Nation.
Nanibush has published in FUSE magazine, Literary Review of Canada, MUSKRAT magazine and in the book: This is an Honour Song: Twenty Years Since the Blockades amount others. She is an Idle No More Toronto organizer and history buff. ”
Unlike the previous two #CivilDebates, this debate will not be modled on the Parliamentary debate system. Discussion will be broken into five sections:
1
5 minutes from each of the speakers responding to the statement:
The issues that created the Idle No More movement require extreme methods to achieve change.
2
Up to 5 minutes each for each of the speakers to respond to any of the ideas put forward by the other speakers.
3
Reading of 21 Provocative Statements. 7 each provided by by the speakers, but not-attributed.
4
Opportunity for audience members to respond to one of the statements for two minutes. Debaters may also participate.
5
Conclusion. An opportunity to define the final portion of the discussion to discuss any actions, opportunities or ideas have been illuminated by the discussion.
#CIVILDEBATES
Debate 3: Idle No More
June 18, 2013; doors 7pm, debates 7.30pm
The Theatre Centre Pop-Up, 1095 Queen St. West, at Dovercourt
PWYC at the door. No RSVP required.
Hashtag: #CivilDebates
Click here for more information about the Civil Debates series in partnership between The Theatre Centre & Praxis Theatre.
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