I have lectured in scriptwriting at Middlesex University since 2003,
also guest lecturing at my own alma mater University of East
London, Birkbeck, and Jagiellonian University in Kraków. At
Middlesex, I have progressed from Lecturer to Senior Lecturer,
Principal Lecturer, Associate Professor, and now am Head of the
Media Department.
My research outputs have predominately been practice-as-research,
including all of my plays, films, and directing work since being
employed as an academic, I have also written more conventional
academic outputs, a selection of which is listed below. Principle
interests are the ways in which my current writing intersects with
folklore and myth, and the ways in which dramatists can engage with
new technologies.
Charlton, James Martin and Moar, Magnus (2018)
VR and the dramatic theatre: are they fellow creatures?, International Journal of Performance Arts and Digital Media, 14
(2) . pp. 187-198. ISSN 2040-0934
(doi:10.1080/14794713.2018.1511137)
Abstract: This paper describes an experimental project that
aims to investigate the scope of methodological and technical
possibilities of using 360° videos for experiencing authored drama.
In particular, it examines how a work written for the medium of
theatre, with a traditional audience-drama relationship of viewer
invisibility and non-participation, might translate into a viewing
experience as a VR drama. The technical and dramaturgical issues
arising from this are discussed. Specifically, the shared
voyeuristic quality of both media is examined. Is the invisible
viewer of VR drama in the invidious role of Glaucon’s iniquitous
shepherd Gyges, or does the medium give invisibility a cloak of
aesthetic value?
Charlton, James Martin (2016)
Telling and Retelling the Tale: Adapting the Murder Ballad
‘Duncan and Brady’ for the Stage as Past and Future Visions of a
Folk Crime, Writing in Practice: The Journal of Creative Writing Research, 2.
ISSN 2058-5535
Abstract: In adapting the murder ballad "Duncan and Brady"
for the stage as a one act play, Been on the Job Too Long,
and setting the story within that adaptation in three different
places and time periods, the playwright made a decision to stage a
meditation on how the true murder story of
Duncan and Brady is an ideal tale to be told and retold.
Telling and retelling the tale in different times and places had its
own rewards for the writer, and potentially for performers. In
writing three versions of this tale, the playwright stretched,
challenged and gave himself increased scope as a writer and
researcher, as well as stretching, challenging and giving a showcase
to actors who perform the piece. This paper explores some of the key
decisions, techniques and discoveries made in the process of
adapting the ballad for the stage. It tells how this process gave
the writer increased clarity in terms of his writerly objectives and
personal vision.
Charlton, James Martin (2015)
Adapting The Pilgrim's Progress for the stage (2). The Recorder, 21 . pp. 20-22. ISSN 1198-8894
Abstract: A short account of adapting Bunyan’s classic work
for the stage, making connections between his writerly voice and
dramatists as diverse as the anonymous author of
The Summoning of Everyman, G. Bernard Shaw, and Sarah Kane.
Charlton, James Martin (2009) Teaching screenwriting. Writing in education (48) . pp. 61-64. ISSN 1361-8539
Abstract: Article on methods of teaching screenwriting to
undergraduate students. James Charlton shares his approach to
developing visual storytelling with undergraduates.
Charlton, James Martin (2007)
Whose journey is this? A radical approach to the question of
the 'journey' taken in scripts. In: Story: The Heart of the Matter. Butt, Maggie, ed.
Greenwich Exchange, London, pp. 111-123. ISBN 1871551935
Abstract: Book chapter exploring radical approaches to
narrative structure in theatre and film scripts from the perspective
of a practising writer.
Conference papers available at my profile on
Academia
Charlton, James Martin (2017)
The Theatrum Mundi and Everyman/Everywoman: traditionalist
dramaturgical devices in the contemporary stage Poetics of the
author, James Martin Charlton. Conference Proceedings of the 3rd Creative Writing Conference
2017. In: 3rd International Conference in Creative Writing
(University of Western Macedonia), 06-08 Oct 2017, Corfu, Greece.
ISBN 9786188104792.
Charlton, James Martin and Moar, Magnus (2015)
A desire for immersion: the panorama to the Oculus Rift.
International Panorama Conference 2015. In: 24th International
Panorama Conference 2015, 9-12 Sep 2015, Namur, Belgium. .
Gibb, Lorna and Charlton, James Martin (2014)
Folk Song Stories as Structural Paradigms. In: NAWE
Conference 2014, 14-16 Nov 2014, Bristol, UK. .
Charlton, James Martin (2014)
If a thing’s worth doing, it’s worth doing on public television –
Joe Orton’s plays on television. In: Theatre and Television: Adaptation, Production, Performance,
19-20 Feb 2015, Alexandra Palace. .
Charlton, James Martin (2014)
Been on the job too long: past and present visions of a folk
crime. In: Stage the Future: The First International Conference of
Science Fiction Theatre, 26-27 Apr 2014, Royal Holloway, University
of London, Egham Hill, TW20 0EX, UK. .
Charlton, James Martin (2013) The anti-didactic hypothesis.
In: Great Writing 2013, 29-30 June 2013, Imperial College London. .