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Identity in adolescents is an ever-growing concern and pre-occupation within formal education, with a need to identify factors that can positively impact upon adolescent development. Identity and understanding of the human condition has been an apparent from earliest records of Homo sapiens. One of the earliest recorded exploration and understanding of this is through ritual ceremony and the role that mask has played in allowing people to explore what it means to be us through adopting the ‘other’. It therefore stands to reason that if masks have and still do allow individuals to explore identity and place in life, that there may be an impact upon adolescents who use masks within their formal drama education. This paper explores: (a) The concepts of identity having a correspondence to mask usage; (b) The potential for masks to support the individual to disassociate from the self; and explore the sense of being. If we wish to support adolescent development and self awareness; at the core of Drama curricula we need to re-position the usage of masks in the classroom beyond being tied to core historical academic knowledge but as a pedagogical methodology in its own right, to support adolescent exploration of identity.

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This page is a summary of: Identity and the Arts: Using Drama and Masks as a Pedagogical Tool to Support Identity Development in Adolescence, Creative Education, January 2015, Scientific Research Publishing, Inc,,
DOI: 10.4236/ce.2015.610092.
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