Publication | Closed Access
Reconstructing a Community, Reclaiming a Playground: A Participatory Action Research Study
43
Citations
22
References
2007
Year
West End NeighborhoodPublic ParticipationParticipatory DevelopmentSocial SciencesUrban SocietyCommunity BuildingCommunity StudiesArt EducationCivic EngagementParticipatory ArtAction ResearchCommunity ArtCommunity EngagementCommunity ArtsCommunity ParticipationParticipatory DesignCultureCommunity DevelopmentPerformance StudiesCommunity EnvironmentCommunity Practice EducationWest EndCommunity PlanningArts
The study examines participants’ perceptions of community and the West End neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio. An asset‑based community art curriculum was implemented, resulting in two murals. Participants view community as a safe, happy, clean, green place, and the West End as having strong social bonds despite trash, violence, and drugs; they increasingly feel empowered to effect change, and the curriculum fostered social change by highlighting children’s role and reclaiming a playground associated with drugs and violence.
This article describes a participatory action research study that examined participants' perceptions of community and of the West End neighborhood in Cincinnati, Ohio, where the study took place. It is argued that oppressive situations have developed strong collective identities and social capital among residents, which can lead to the development of community art as a catalyst for social change and inform community-based art education. An asset-based community art curriculum was implemented and two murals were developed. Results from the study indicate that participants conceive of community, in general, as a safe, happy place that is clean and green, and the West End as a place with strong social bonds despite suffering from trash, violence, and drugs. Results also indicate that participants increasingly realized their own ability to affect change in their community to improve the landscape and promote a cleaner, greener place through art. Data reveal that the community art curriculum contributed to social change in the neighborhood by highlighting the role of neighborhood children and reclaiming a playground that had been associated with drugs and violence.
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