Results for 'body-dance'

967 found
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  1.  10
    Relational Bodies: Dancing With Latina, Chicana and Latin American Bodies.Patrick Bruner Reyes - 2014 - Feminist Theology 22 (3):253-268.
    This article explores how the body is discussed in Latin American, Latina and Chicana Feminist Theology and their conversation partners in cultural, critical, feminist and ethnic studies. The article imagines this discourse as a relational dance that investigates the body as the place from which one views the world, as the locus of investigation and as the indecent body which resists all dualisms and embraces plurality. It is argued that what emerges from this embodied discourse is (...)
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  2. Apposite Bodies: Dancing with Danto.Joshua M. Hall - 2015 - Philosophy in the Contemporary World 22 (1):19-36.
    Though Arthur Danto has long been engaged with issues of embodiment in art and beyond, neither he nor most of his interlocutors have devoted significant attention to the art form in which art and embodiment most vividly intersect, namely dance. This article, first, considers Danto’s brief references to dance in his early magnum opus, The Transfiguration of the Commonplace. Second, it tracks the changes in Danto’s philosophy of art as evidenced in his later After the End of Art (...)
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  3.  30
    Dance as Experience Field of the Body: A Contribution to Aesthetics.Christoph Wulf - 2019 - Aisthesis. Pratiche, Linguaggi E Saperi Dell’Estetico 12 (2):19-26.
    I will focus on dances as performances that bring a knowledge of man and his body to the representation, which would not be visible and comprehensible without it. Dances will be conceived of as patterns in which collectively shared knowledge and collectively shared body practices are staged and performed, and in which a self-expression and self-interpretation of a common order takes place. These are productive, and not reproductive, activities that create communities and cultural identities—namely, by working through difference (...)
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  4.  12
    Rhythmic Bodies: Amplification, Inflection and Transduction in the Dance Performance Techniques of the “Bashment Gal”.Julian Henriques - 2014 - Body and Society 20 (3-4):79-112.
    This article explores the rhythmic body with the example of the embodiment of the ‘bashment gal’ and the role she plays in the dancehall sound system session. It considers rhythm as an energetic patterning process operating both within and between media. Rhythm provides a means of communication and making sense that does not rely on representation or code. There are three elements to performance techniques of the rhythmic body – amplification, inflection and transduction. Amplification for the bashment gal’s (...)
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  5.  14
    Dance Intervention Affects Social Connections and Body Appreciation Among Older Adults in the Long Term Despite COVID-19 Social Isolation: A Mixed Methods Pilot Study.Pil Hansen, Caitlin Main & Liza Hartling - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The ability of dance to address social isolation is argued, but there is a lack of both evidence of such an effect and interventions designed for the purpose. An interdisciplinary research team at University of Calgary partnered with Kaeja d’Dance to pilot test the effects of an intervention designed to facilitate embodied social connections among older adults. Within a mixed methods study design, pre and post behavioral tests and qualitative surveys about experiences of the body and connecting (...)
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  6.  59
    Body, Technology and Society: a Dance of Encounters.Bárbara Nascimento Duarte & Enno Park - 2014 - NanoEthics 8 (3):259-261.
    In the special section ‘Body Hacking: Self-Made Cyborgs and Visions of Transhuman Corporeality’, attention is drawn to cyborgism, a set of cultural and very personal practices of experimentation with the human body that often take place outside the confines of institutionalised technoscience. Known, for example, as ‘body hackers’, ‘grinders’ or ‘self-made cyborgs’ and engaging in unusual forms of body modification, the practitioners are enthusiasts who do not necessarily have any ‘disability’ in the conventional sense of the (...)
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  7.  26
    Dancing Practices: Seeing and Sensing the Moving Body.Susanne Ravn - 2017 - Body and Society 23 (2):57-82.
    This article aims to explore the relation between body and space – specifically how the relation between the embodied awareness of movement and the sense of one’s body-space can be modified and changed deliberately in different kinds of dance practices. Using a multi-sited design, the ethnographical fieldwork, which formed the empirical ground for the study, was from the outset focused on acknowledging the diversity of the dancers’ practices. Each in their own way, the 13 professional dancers involved (...)
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  8.  26
    Dancing bodies: Moving beyond Marxian views of human activity relations and consciousness.Elaine Clark‐Rapley - 1999 - Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 29 (2):89–108.
    Human action has generally appeared to the sociologist as instrumental action, movement conceptualized and valued in terms of its utility, with the actor defined in terms of agency within rationalized social systems . Dance provides a way of seeing that conditions for human existence cannot be reduced to socio-economic relations and forms. Drawing on my ethnographic study of a dance improvisation group, I explore some of the ways in which innovative action resists the productive and textual relations that (...)
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  9. The Phenomenology of the Body Schema and Contemporary Dance Practice: The Example of “Gaga”.Anna Petronella Foultier - 2021 - Journal of Aesthetics and Phenomenology 8 (1):1-20.
    In recent years, the notion of the body schema has been widely discussed, in particular in fields connecting philosophy, cognitive science, and dance studies, as it seems to have bearing across disciplines in a fruitful way. A main source in this literature is Shaun Gallagher’s distinction between the body schema – the “pre-noetic” conditions of bodily performance – and the body image – the body as intentional object –, another is Merleau-Ponty’s writings on the living (...)
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  10.  18
    Yoga, Dance, Team Sports, or Individual Sports: Does the Type of Exercise Matter? An Online Study Investigating the Relationships Between Different Types of Exercise, Body Image, and Well-Being in Regular Exercise Practitioners.Verena Marschin & Cornelia Herbert - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Physical activity, specifically exercising, has been suggested to improve body image, mental health, and well-being. With respect to body image, previous findings highlight a general benefit of exercise. This study investigates whether the relationship between exercising and body image varies with the type of exercise that individuals preferentially and regularly engage in. In addition, physical efficacy was explored as a potential psychological mediator between type of exercise and body image. Using a cross-sectional design, healthy regular exercise (...)
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  11.  32
    Dance Your PhD: Embodied Animations, Body Experiments, and the Affective Entanglements of Life Science Research.Natasha Myers - 2012 - Body and Society 18 (1):151-189.
    In 2008 Science Magazine and the American Academy for the Advancement of Science hosted the first ever Dance Your PhD Contest in Vienna, Austria. Calls for submission to the second, third, and fourth annual Dance Your PhD contests followed suit, attracting hundreds of entries and featuring scientists based in the US, Canada, Australia, Europe and the UK. These contests have drawn significant media attention. While much of the commentary has focused on the novelty of dancing scientists and the (...)
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  12. Dance displays in gibbons: biological and linguistic perspectives on structured, intentional, and rhythmic body movement.Camille Coye, Kai Caspar & Pritty Patel-Grosz - 2024 - Primates.
    Female crested gibbons (genus Nomascus) perform conspicuous sequences of twitching movements involving the rump and extremities. However, these dances have attracted little scientific attention and their structure and meaning remain largely obscure. Here we analyse close-range video recordings of captive crested gibbons, extracting descriptions of dance in four species (N. annamensis, N. gabriellae, N. leucogenys and N. siki). In addition, we report results from a survey amongst relevant professionals clarifying behavioural contexts of dance in captive and wild crested (...)
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  13.  45
    Between minds and bodies: Some insights about creativity from dance improvisation.Klara Łucznik - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (3):301-308.
    Observing dance improvisation provides a unique opportunity to understand how people collaborate together while creating. It is an opportunity to consider how new ideas appear, not simply from the internal processes of a single creator but rather from the interactions between the minds, bodies and the environment acting on and between a group of improvising dancers. Improvisational scores served in this study as a laboratory into group creativity. Using a video-stimulated recall method, which asks dancers to reflect upon their (...)
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  14.  23
    Dance and the Lived Body: A Descriptive Aesthetics.Drew A. Hyland - 1987 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 14 (1):60-65.
  15.  62
    ‘Being in your body’ and ‘being in the moment’: the dancing body-subject and inhabited transcendence.Aimie C. E. Purser - 2017 - Journal of the Philosophy of Sport 45 (1):37-52.
    Sports studies is currently dominated by the intellectualist approach to understanding skill and expertise, meaning that questions about the phenomenological nature of skilled performance in sport have generally been overshadowed by the emphasis on the cognitive. By contrast, this article responds to calls for a phenomenology of sporting embodiment by opening up a philosophical exploration of the nature of athletic being-in-the-world. In particular, the paper explores the conceptualisation of immanence and transcendence in relation to the embodied practice of dance, (...)
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  16. Traces across the body: the influence of music-dance synchrony on the observation of dance.Matthew Harold Woolhouse & Rosemary Lai - 2014 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 8:106000.
    In previous studies investigating entrainment and person perception, synchronized movements were found to enhance memory for incidental person attributes. Although this effect is robust, including in dance, the process by which it is actuated are less well understood. In this study, two hypotheses are investigated: that enhanced memory for person attributes is the result of (1) increased gaze time between in-tempo dancers, and/or (2) greater attentional focus between in-tempo dancers. To explore these possible mechanisms in the context of observing (...)
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  17.  56
    Dancing and Flying the Body Mechanical: Five Visions for the New Civilisation.Katia Pizzi - 2009 - The European Legacy 14 (7):785-798.
    This article explores Futurist technophilia and some more or less latent technophobia, in the period after 1918. Fuelled by the economic and industrial advancements of the so-called “Giolittian age,” as well as an extensive employment of war technology in the First World War, the Futurist technological imagination remains both robust and wide-ranging in the postwar period. Resonant of nineteenth-century French and Italian literary traditions, Filippo Tommaso Marinetti's official position clusters round the powerful, if hackneyed, images of the steam train and (...)
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  18.  14
    Engaging With Contemporary Dance: What Can Body Movements Tell us About Audience Responses?Lida Theodorou, Patrick G. T. Healey & Fabrizio Smeraldi - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10:363343.
    3 In live performances seated audiences have restricted opportunities for response. Some 4 responses are obvious, such as applause and cheering, but there are also many apparently 5 incidental movements including posture shifts, fixing hair, scratching and adjusting glasses. 6 Do these movements provide clues to people’s level of engagement with a performance? Our 7 basic hypothesis is that audience responses are part of a bi-directional system of audience- 8 performer communication. This communication is part of what distinguishes live from (...)
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  19.  11
    Back to the dance itself: phenomenologies of the body in performance.Sondra Horton Fraleigh (ed.) - 2018 - Urbana: University of Illinois Press.
    In Back to the Dance Itself, Sondra Fraleigh edits essays that illuminate how scholars apply a range of phenomenologies to explore questions of dance and the world; performing life and language; body and place; and self-knowing in performance. Some authors delve into theoretical perspectives, while others relate personal experiences and reflections that reveal fascinating insights arising from practice. Collectively, authors give particular consideration to the interactive lifeworld of making and doing that motivates performance. Their texts and photographs (...)
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  20.  37
    Abstracting Dance: Detaching Ourselves from the Habitual Perception of the Moving Body.Vered Aviv - 2017 - Frontiers in Psychology 8.
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  21.  32
    The Mātṛkā Dance: Conceptualizing the Dancing Body of the Goddess.Ana Laura Funes Maderey - 2024 - Sophia 63 (3):571-586.
    Conceptualizing the image of a dancing Supreme Goddess in the Hindu tradition presents a philosophical challenge because it demands a coherent rational reconciliation between her nature as continuously changing into multiple forms and the realm of pure, absolute, never-changing, formless being. Different strategies have been proposed in the history of philosophy in India. This paper analyzes the image of the dancing Goddess as it appears in the Devī Māhātmya and in the Tantric iconography of the Goddess Kālī. An argument is (...)
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  22. How marking in dance constitutes thinking with the body.David Kirsh - 2011 - The External Mind:183-214.
    In dance, there is a practice called ‘marking’. When dancers mark, they execute a dance phrase in a simplified, schematic or abstracted form. Based on our interviews with professional dancers in the classical, modern, and contemporary traditions, it is fair to assume that most dancers mark in the normal course of rehearsal and practice. When marking, dancers use their body-in-motion to represent some aspect of the full-out phrase they are thinking about. Their stated reason for marking is (...)
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  23.  33
    Moist art as telematic dance: Connecting wet and dry bodies.Ivani Santana - 2015 - Technoetic Arts 13 (1-2):187-201.
    Assuming that the contemporary world is inevitably set in the context of moistmedia (Ascott 2000), this article discusses some artistic proposals that specifically seek to explore the relationship between dry technology and the wet human body, as in the case of telematic dance. This article is grounded in Clark’s (2003) concept of the ‘extended mind’ and ‘cognitive artefact’; Noë’s (2004; 2012) ‘activism’ theory; and Gallagher’s (2005) ideas surrounding ‘body image’ and ‘body schema’. My discussion of ‘moistmedia’ (...)
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  24.  13
    (1 other version)The Dance Body as an Arena of Values and the Chronotope of the Theater - An Exercise of Analysis.Marilia Amorim - forthcoming - Bakhtiniana.
    RESUMO Exercício de análise do discurso da dança de espetáculo através do conceito bakhtiniano de cronotopo. A partir do gênero do balé clássico, estabelece-se o teatro como cronotopo constitutivo que concretiza espaço-temporalmente seus valores sócioestéticos. A análise de transgressões cronotópicas permite identificar o surgimento do balé moderno com base em duas coreografias do artista russo Vaslav Nijinski.
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  25.  28
    Bodies Moving and Moved: A Phenomenological Analysis of the Dancing Subject and the Cognitive and Ethical Values of Dance Art.Jaana Parviainen - 1998
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  26.  24
    Body Knowledge, Part I: Dance, Anthropology, and the Erasure of History.Isaiah Lorado Wilner - 2022 - Journal of the History of Ideas 83 (1):111-142.
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  27.  40
    Transnationalities, Bodies, and Power: Dancing Across Different Worlds.Caroline Joan - 2008 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 22 (3):191-204.
  28.  45
    Transnationalities, bodies, and power: Dancing across different worlds.Caroline Joan S. Picart - 2008 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 22 (3):pp. 191-204.
  29.  12
    Student Moods Before and After Body Expression and Dance Assessments. Gender Perspective.Mercè Mateu, Silvia Garcías, Luciana Spadafora, Ana Andrés & Eulàlia Febrer - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Body expression and dance are activities that contribute to the integral well-being of people. In an educational context, the process of evaluating our students implies variations in their moods. This study tackles the states of mind that students perceive before and after the evaluation of a practice in the subject ofBody expression and dance, developed through choreographies, that were, previously rehearsed, and later presented to the rest of the class in a specific session. Our main interest was (...)
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  30. Dance's Mind-Body Problem.Anna Pakes - unknown
  31. The Dancing Body: Hopping Anyone?'.Evadne Kelly - 2007 - Nexus 20 (1):2.
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  32. Dance, Rhythm, and Social Space.Delia Popa - 2019 - Studia Universitatis Babeş-Bolyai Philosophia:109-120.
    Does contemporary phenomenology envision movement in space as a displacement from a point A to a point B? Is there something more at stake in the movement of our bodies, that cannot be reduced to this type of displacement? What happens when several bodies move together, like in dance practices of all kinds? The paper questions the role of repetitive movements in the institution of places we inhabit and the importance of the places we find ourselves to be for (...)
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  33.  12
    Choreography of the “non-human”. The monstrous as the product of contemporary dance’s bodies “beyond codes”.Serena Massimo - 2021 - Studi di Estetica 20.
    Xavier Le Roy’s performance Self-Unfinished is emblematic of how contemporary dance’s resistance to the submission of the body to a codified ideal body model manifests itself through the staging of bodies “beyond codes”, i.e., bodies that take surprising, sometimes even apparently “monstrous” shapes. The purpose of this article is to investigate the “monstrosity” of Self-Unfinished and to sketch out an analysis of it following Hermann Schmitz's theory of the Leib and Tonino Griffero’s account on atmospheres.
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  34.  69
    Writing for the body notation, reconstruction, and reinvention in dance.Mark Franko - 2011 - Common Knowledge 17 (2):321-334.
    This article explores the history of dance notation from the Renaissance to postmodern dance. It examines the tension between text and oral tradition in Western dance practices, as well as the issue of how to reconcile our views of choreography as both scriptural and visual. It has been difficult, if not impossible, to think of notation in relation to composition; notation has become almost solely associated with reconstruction as a phenomenon of historical interest. But, at the same (...)
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  35. "Reading Dance: Bodies and Subjects in Contemporary American Dance": Susan Leigh Foster. [REVIEW]Graham Mcfee - 1988 - British Journal of Aesthetics 28 (2):190.
     
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  36. Painting the Body Brown and Other Lessons on How to Dance Latin.Laurie Frederik - 2017 - In Laurie A. Frederik, Showing off, showing up: studies of hype, heightened performance, and cultural power. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
     
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  37.  12
    The Profiles of Body Image Associate With Changes in Depression Among Participants in Dance Movement Therapy Group.Päivi Pylvänäinen, Katriina Hyvönen & Joona Muotka - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
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  38.  78
    The philosophy of dance : Bodies in motion, bodies at rest.Francis Sparshott - 2004 - In Peter Kivy, The Blackwell Guide to Aesthetics. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 276--290.
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  39.  58
    Body memory and dance.Monica E. Alarcon Davila - 2012 - In Sabine C. Koch, Thomas Fuchs, Michela Summa & Cornelia Müller, Body Memory, Metaphor and Movement. John Benjamins. pp. 84--105.
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  40.  44
    The Invisibility of Disability: Using Dance to Shake from Bioethics the Idea of ‘Broken Bodies’.Shawn H. E. Harmon - 2014 - Bioethics 29 (7):488-498.
    Complex social and ethical problems are often most effectively solved by engaging them at the messy and uncomfortable intersections of disciplines and practices, a notion that grounds the InVisible Difference project, which seeks to extend thinking and alter practice around the making, status, ownership, and value of work by contemporary dance choreographers by examining choreographic work through the lenses of law, bioethics, dance scholarship, and the practice of dance by differently-abled dancers. This article offers a critical thesis (...)
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  41. Affective passions: the dancing female body and colonial rupture in Zouzou (1934) and Karmen Geï (2001).Saër Maty Bâ & Kate E. Taylor-Jones - 2012 - In Saër Maty Bâ & Will Higbee, De-westernizing film studies. New York: Routledge.
     
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  42. Performing Illness: A Dialogue About an Invisibly Disabled Dancing Body.Sarah Pini & Kate Maguire-Rosier - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12:566520.
    This conversational opinion article between two parties – Kate, a disability performance scholar and Sarah, an interdisciplinary artist-scholar with lived experience of disability – considers the dancing body as redeemer in the specific case of a dancer experiencing ‘chemo fog’, or Chemotherapy-Related Cognitive Impairment (CRCI) after undergoing oncological treatments for Hodgkin Lymphoma. This work draws on Pini’s own lived experience of illness (Pini & Pini, 2019) in dialogue with Maguire-Rosier’s study of dancers with hidden impairments (Gibson & Maguire-Rosier, 2020). (...)
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  43.  15
    Dance and the Corporeal Uncanny: Philosophy in Motion.Philipa Rothfield - 2020 - Routledge.
    Dance and the Corporeal Uncanny takes the philosophy of the body into the field of dance, through the lens of subjectivity and via its critique. It draws on dance and performance as its dedicated field of practice to articulate a philosophy of agency and movement. It is organized around two conceptual paradigms - one phenomenological, the other an interpretation of Nietzschean philosophy, mediated through the work of Deleuze. The book draws on dance studies, cultural critique, (...)
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  44.  19
    Dance Is More Than Meets the Eye—How Can Dance Performance Be Made Accessible for a Non-sighted Audience?Bettina Bläsing & Esther Zimmermann - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Dance is regarded as visual art form by common arts and science perspectives. Definitions of dance as means of communication agree that its message is conveyed by the dancer/choreographer via the human body for the observer, leaving no doubt that dance is performed to be watched. Brain activation elicited by the visual perception of dance has also become a topic of interest in cognitive neuroscience, with regards to action observation in the context of learning, expertise (...)
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  45.  30
    Back to the Dance Itself: Phenomenologies of the Body in Performance, edited by Fraleigh, S.Rebecca Lloyd - 2020 - Journal of Phenomenological Psychology 51 (2):227-233.
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  46.  19
    Memories in Motion: The Irish Dancing Body.Helena Wulff - 2005 - Body and Society 11 (4):45-62.
    The aim of this article is to explore the Irish dancing body by combining the growing social science interest in mobility with the established area of the body as a site of culture. On the basis of ethnographic observations and interviews about dance and culture in Ireland, I will discuss the Irish dancing body in relation to the construction of social memory, the embodiment of values linked to Irish national identity, mobility, dance competitions and global (...)
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  47.  40
    When the Landscape becomes Flesh: An Investigation into Body Boundaries with Special Reference to Tiwi Dance and Western Classical Ballet.Andrée Grau - 2005 - Body and Society 11 (4):141-163.
    Dance anthropologists and ethnomusicologists are trained to treat the labels ‘dance’ and ‘music’ with caution, because the terms carry preconceptions that may mask significant aspects of the structured movement/sound systems they study. Yet many talk about ‘the body’ – the medium through which these systems come into being – as something given and ‘true’, without investigating its emic conceptualizations or looking into the implications these may have in terms of how music and dance are experienced. The (...)
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  48.  55
    The Dancing Brain: Structural and Functional Signatures of Expert Dance Training.Agnieszka Z. Burzynska, Karolina Finc, Brittany K. Taylor, Anya M. Knecht & Arthur F. Kramer - 2017 - Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 11:299704.
    Dance – as a ritual, therapy, and leisure activity – has been known for thousands of years. Today, dance is increasingly used as therapy for cognitive and neurological disorders such as dementia and Parkinson’s disease. Surprisingly, the effects of dance training on the healthy young brain are not well understood despite the necessity of such information for planning successful clinical interventions. Therefore, this study examined actively performing, expert-level trained college students as a model of long-term exposure to (...)
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  49.  17
    Improvisational Dance-Based Psychological Training of College Students’ Dance Improvement.Xinyu Dou, Lin Jia & Jinchuan Ge - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Dance creation involves complex psychological activities. Although previous studies have conducted extensive investigations on the psychological aspects of choreographers’ creations, little is known regarding the psychological barrier of choreographers in terms of creativity. The study aims to explore the psychological barrier of innovation in dance choreography, which is a kind of situation between mental illness and mental problems. The research shows that improvisational dance is a free dance with the human body as a material carrier, (...)
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  50.  31
    Dancing in Time.Aili Bresnahan - 2017 - In Ian Phillips, The Routledge Handbook of Philosophy of Temporal Experience: Routledge Handbooks in Philosophy. New York: Routledge. pp. 339-348.
    This chapter will analyze the experience and, in particular the conscious experience, of dancing in time from the perspective of the trained dancer while performing. The focus is thus on the experience and consciousness of a dancer who is moving her body in time rather than on the experience of a seated audience member or dance appreciator who is watching a dancer move. The question of how temporality is experienced in dance by the appreciator will therefore not (...)
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