UGC NET Unit 10 — Theatre Education, Pedagogy & Research

(UGC-NET: Performing Arts — Drama & Theatre — Exam-ready notes)


1. Overview: Why this unit matters for UGC-NET

Unit 10 tests three interconnected areas: education & curriculum, training methods & movement analysis, and research, institutions and current ecosystem (festivals, awards, patrons). Questions commonly ask for definitions, comparisons (e.g., formal university training vs traditional gurukula systems), names of eminent scholars/works, and recent institutional/award news. Prepare concise definitions plus examples and a few up-to-date names.


2. Theatre in Formal Curriculum (Primary to University)

A. Primary & Secondary Levels

  • Rationale: Theatre in early education develops communication skills, empathy, creativity, social learning and enhances language and cognitive abilities.

  • Curricular Models:

    • Integrated approach: Drama activities embedded within language, social studies and life-skills.

    • Activity units: Story drama, puppetry, role-play, theatre games, community projects.

  • Pedagogy: Play-based learning, participatory workshops, child-centred pedagogy (focus on process over product).

  • Assessment: Portfolios, performance rubrics, reflective journals, peer assessment.

B. Higher Education (Undergraduate & Postgraduate)

  • University Programmes: Theatre departments offer BA/BFA, MA/MFA, PhD in Drama, Theatre Studies, Direction, Design, Applied Theatre and Performance Studies.

  • Pedagogical Components: Theory (dramatic literature, history, criticism), practical training (acting, direction, design), research methodology, production work, internships.

  • Professional Training Institutes: National School of Drama (NSD), university departments, drama schools offering diplomas/advanced training — link theoretical study to practical productions and repertory work (see Institutions section).

Exam tip: Be ready to contrast primary (learning-through-play) vs university (systematic theory + practice).


3. Relevance of Traditional Theatre Training

  • What counts as ‘traditional’: Bharata Muni’s Natyashastra, gurukula apprenticeship, classical dance-drama training (Kathakali, Koodiyattam, Yakshagana), and folk apprenticeship systems.

  • Why it remains relevant:

    • Codified techniques (mudras, tala/rhythm, abhinaya) underpin physical and vocal discipline.

    • Ritual consciousness and embodiment of rasa provide depth to expressive work.

    • Local knowledge systems (folk music, oral storytelling) expand repertoire and community engagement.

  • Integration into modern pedagogy: Many contemporary curricula integrate abhinaya, nattuvangam, kalaripayattu or yoga with Stanislavskian and Grotowskian methods to produce versatile actors.

Exam note: Expect a comparative question asking advantages/limitations of traditional vs institutional training.


4. Movement Analysis & Somatic Practices (kinesthetics, Yoga, Theatre Games, Martial Arts, Folk, Puppetry)

A. Kinesthetics

  • Definition: Study of body movement quality, dynamics, space, force and timing.

  • Use in training: Movement analysis (Laban/Bartenieff), body mapping, kinaesthetic awareness exercises to build presence and clarity.

B. Yoga

  • Contribution: Breath control (pranayama), focused attention, postural alignment, stamina and meditative concentration.

  • Applications: Voice support, emotional regulation, and centring before performance.

C. Theatre Games

  • Origins & Purpose: Viola Spolin, Keith Johnstone inspired improvisation games that build spontaneity, listening, ensemble and status play.

  • Pedagogical roles: Warm-ups, creativity enhancement, devising and inclusion.

D. Martial Arts

  • Relevance: Kalaripayattu, Karate, Tai Chi — training posture, fall training, fight choreography, rhythmic discipline and physical control.

  • Use: Stage combat safety, stylised movement vocabularies, body conditioning.

E. Folk Forms

  • Examples: Bhavai, Nautanki, Bhand Pather, Yakshagana — rhythmic stamping, chorus/chorus leader dynamics, large gesture vocabularies.

  • Use: Ensemble aesthetics, music-movement integration, audience engagement techniques (song, call-and-response).

F. Puppetry

  • As training tool: Develops imagination, object work, silent storytelling, and precise manual coordination.

  • Dramaturgical use: Hybrid productions combine puppetry and live acting; useful in TIE and children’s theatre.

Exam tip: Prepare short definitions and one example application for each movement source. A frequent question asks to match a technique to its benefit (e.g., Yoga → breath control).


5. Eminent Scholars & Their Works (selective and exam-relevant)

Be prepared to name 6–10 scholars and one key contribution each (UGC often tests names + works).

  • Bharata MuniNatyashastra (foundational Indian dramaturgy).

  • Aparna Bhargava DharwadkerTheatres of Independence (post-1947 urban performance studies).

  • Rustom BharuchaTheatre and the World / Theatre of Our Times (postcolonial and intercultural performance studies).

  • Kapila Vatsyayan — Research on Indian classical forms and natya theory.

  • Ebrahim Alkazi — Pedagogy and institutionalisation at NSD (theatre training & production practices).

  • Dilip Chitre, Girish Karnad, Vijay Tendulkar (practitioner-scholars whose plays and essays inform modern Indian theatre).

  • Other scholars: Erika Fischer-Lichte (performance theory — global), Patrice Pavis (semiotics of theatre), P. C. Chatterjee (regional studies).

Exam tip: If asked “Name a scholar who wrote on Indian theatre since independence,” Dharwadker’s Theatres of Independence is a safe citation.


6. Trends in Indian Theatre Research & Scholarship

  • Historic waves: Post-colonial historiography, group theatre and leftist cultural studies (IPTA), modernism and experiment (1960s–80s), Theatre-of-Roots and Third Theatre debates (1970s), postdramatic/intercultural experiments (1990s–present).

  • Recent emphases:

    • Performance studies and interdisciplinarity (visual art, film studies);

    • Community/Applied theatre research (development, health, education);

    • Digital/archival projects and performance documentation;

    • Studies of marginalised performance traditions and vernacular literatures.

  • Methodologies: Ethnography, archival research, practice-as-research (PAR), and critical theory.


7. Patronage & Institutional Support (Post-Independence)

  • Major national institutions: Sangeet Natak Akademi (national academy), National School of Drama (NSD), Lalit Kala Akademi & state academies — crucial for awards, training, documentation and grants.

  • Key repertories & private initiatives: Prithvi Theatre (Mumbai), NCPA (Mumbai), Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, Bharat Bhavan (Bhopal) — venues and production support.

  • Corporate & NGO patronage: CSR funding, arts festivals support, workshops (increasingly important since 1990s).

  • State patronage: State cultural departments support regional festivals and training.

  • Exam note: Learn functions of Sangeet Natak Akademi and NSD; name two prominent private institutions (Prithvi, Bharat Bhavan).


8. Festivals, Awardees & Current Affairs (how to prepare)

  • Major National Festivals (regularly referenced):

    • Bharat Rang Mahotsav (National School of Drama) — large national festival.

    • Prithvi Theatre Festival (Mumbai) — annual, showcases contemporary theatre.

    • Jairangam (Jaipur Theatre Festival), Nandikar, Serendipity Arts, Kala Ghoda — notable regional festivals.

  • Major Awards:

    • Sangeet Natak Akademi Awards (lifetime and yearly contributions in theatre & allied arts). The Akademi publishes awardee lists online.

    • Padma Awards (Cultural) recognize theatre practitioners; also state awards and fellowships.

  • Current awareness: For NET, know recent notable awardees or festival highlights only if explicitly asked — otherwise, be prepared to name major recurring festivals and the function of Sangeet Natak Akademi/NSD. (If an exam question asks a current-year winner, verify from official sites; SNA maintains updated lists).

Practical study tip: Memorise 6–8 festivals, 4 institutions, and 4 recent/high-profile awardees (from SNA/Padma lists) relevant to your exam year.


9. Research Methods & Dissertation Topics (PhD/MA level guidance)

  • Common methodologies: Practice-as-research, ethnography, performance analysis, archival reconstruction, dramaturgical case studies.

  • Suggested research areas: Devising community theatre for development; archival studies of regional repertories; comparative studies of abhinaya & acting pedagogy; technology and performance (digital theatre).

  • Proposal components: Research question, literature review, methodology (fieldwork/archives/practice), expected contributions, timeline.


10. Quick Revision Cheatsheet (UGC-NET style)

  • Define: Natyashastra; Ahārya; Nepathya; Theatre of the Oppressed; TIE.

  • Name 4 institutions: NSD, Sangeet Natak Akademi, Prithvi Theatre, Bharat Bhavan.

  • Name 4 scholars & one work each: Bharata Muni (Natyashastra), Aparna Dharwadker (Theatres of Independence), Rustom Bharucha (Theatre and the World), Kapila Vatsyayan (classical studies).

  • List 6 movement sources: Kinesthetics (Laban), Yoga, Theatre Games, Martial Arts, Folk forms, Puppetry.

  • Top festivals (memorise 6): Bharat Rang Mahotsav, Prithvi, Jairangam, Nandikar Festival, Serendipity Arts, Kala Ghoda.

👋Subscribe to
ProTeacher.in

Sign up to receive NewsLetters in your inbox.

We don’t spam! Read our privacy policy for more info.