Theatre professor aims to get people talking, rather than arguing, about climate change
On all seven continents, people are popping up covered head-to-toe in green.
These green people, who are taking pictures of themselves in front of familiar cityscapes and famous landmarks, are participating in Beth Osnesâ Green Suits Your City, which aims to spark conversation about climate change.
This project gives people a chance to physically embody the concept of greening our cities, says Osnes, an associate professor of theatre and dance at the University of Colorado Boulder.
Green Suits Your City works to change the issue of climate change from an âintellectual conceptâ to an embodied experience by engaging both performers and non-performers in a form of socially active applied theatre.
Osnes says her project helps people relate to one another on climate-change issues in a way that âbypasses some of the defensesâ that people naturally have. It does so by giving them a ârelatable and delightfulâ experience from which to base their conversation.
âIt matters how we start the conversation,â Osnes says. âIf I start a conversation ⊠with my finger pointed like Iâm blaming you, we are going to have a very specific type of conversation.â
Osnesâ project provides an opportunity to start a conversation based on curiosity and not hostility. She challenges the idea that people are not acting on issues of climate change because of a lack of information, but instead because they may feel it does not relate to them.
The idea came from Osnesâ show, , which she describes as âa mini musical for youth engagement in climate and energy issues.â In that show, children don green suits as a way to represent ancient plants.
âSomething happens to the kids when they get into them. Their inhabitations change. Their behavior changes. Their performance in their own bodies changes. They get very physically expressive.â
Shine is a part of an initiative she co-founded and co-directs at CU Boulder, , which focuses on creative climate communication.
Osnes is an applied theatre practitioner, which means that she uses theatre in communities with primarily non-performers to stimulate social change. She obtained her bachelorâs in theology from Marquette University and her masterâs and PhD in theatre from CU Boulder.
Osnes uses theatre in her work primarily with women and children to teach them how to use performance to empower their own voices. Currently her focus is on environmental challenges, but this expressive outlet brings her hope in the face of difficult work.
âFor me, why I selfishly do this project is to keep myself joyful in this work,â Osnes said. âI have children, and I care so much about our world and our future, and itâs bleak when you look at our current trajectory ⊠To sustain me in this work, I do this project because it is fun, and itâs visual, and it makes me smile again and again.â