My main research interests lie in the field of popular and vernacular performance and I have published extensively on Storytelling (and its social and policy applications), Grand-Guignol and Brecht and his collaborators. In particular, my work on storytelling has led me to work on the interface between storytelling and digital technology and the way in which the internet has enabled the telling and sharing of ‘extraordinary’ stories of the everyday experiences of people. I have recently been, or am currently, the Principal Investigator on several RCUK-funded projects:
- ‘ASPECT’, looking at the use of storytelling and technology to reframe the public debate around climate change, in partnership with DECC
- ‘Taking the Field’, a Knowledge Transfer Partnership with the MCC, using technology to collect and disseminate the stories and oral histories of grassroots cricket communities in the UK and Sri Lanka
- ‘The University of the Village’, a Connected Communities project in collaboration with the Universities of Surrey and Glamorgan and BT, exploring the use of Superfast Broadband to link universities and rural communities
- ‘The Rural Connective’, a collaboration with BT and dot.rural, the Digital Economy Hub at the University of Aberdeen, which has built a network of stakeholders looking at ways of using new broadband capability to unlock the creative and cultural capital within rural communities.
- ‘Loneliness in the Digital Age’, a collaboration between the Universities of Bath, Exeter, Lincoln and Newcastle, which emerged from the ESRC Emoticon Sandpit exploring empathy and trust in online communications.
- ‘The EMoTICON Network’, a collaboration with the University of Leeds, which brings together the five projects funded under the ESRC’s Empathy and Trust in Online Communications programme and also extends the network to other researchers in the same field.
I am also Co-investigator on two major RCUK projects: ‘Creative Practice as Mutual Recovery’, a collaboration led by the Institute of Mental Health at the University of Nottingham, exploring the value of creative interventions as a tool for mutual recovery in the field of Mental Health (AHRC Connected Communities) and also on ‘DRY: Drought Resilience and You’, a £4.3m NERC-funded initiative in collaboration with the University of the West of England, Exeter, Dundee, Warwick, Sheffield, CEH Wallingford amongst others.
I would welcome applications for doctoral study in any area of popular performance and storytelling.