Litcius/Paper detail

Inclusive online community arts: COVID and beyond COVID

Matthew Reason

2022Cultural Trends28 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Inclusivity is an underlying principle of community arts, particularly for learning disabled and autistic people for whom the arts can create spaces of equity and inclusive participation. The Covid-19 pandemic required practitioners to find ways of replicating this sense of inclusivity through online delivery. This “digital turn” raised two recurring concerns. First, the accessibility and inclusivity of online activities; second, the quality of alternative digital provision. This paper examines these themes in the specific context of the Creative Doodle Book, which modelled inclusive online practice with learning disabled participants. Drawing on over 20 interviews with learning-disability focused community arts groups, the paper explores barriers to access, but also issues surrounding support and expectations. However, the focus is equally on the benefits once within an online “space”, including new skills, widening networks, the development of inclusive capital and the opportunity to enable greater agency and self-advocacy both during Covid and beyond.

Topics & Concepts

The artsCoronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19)SociologyContext (archaeology)Public relationsAgency (philosophy)Equity (law)Sense of communityOnline communityPedagogyPsychologyPolitical scienceSocial scienceMedicinePaleontologyDiseasePathologyLawInfectious disease (medical specialty)BiologyVirtual Reality Applications and ImpactsArt Therapy and Mental HealthTheatre and Performance Studies
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