- The Oxford Handbook of Dance and Politics
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Tracking the Political Economy of Dance
- Dance and/as Competition in the Privately Owned US Studio
- Racing in Place: A Meta-Memoir on Dance Politics and Practice
- Epiphanic Moments: Dancing Politics
- Performing Collectively
- Urban Choreographies: Artistic Interventions and the Politics of Urban Space
- The Politics of Speculative Imagination in Contemporary Choreography
- Toward a Choreo-Political Theory of Articulation
- Rehearsing In-Difference: The Politics of Aesthetics in the Performances of Pina Bausch and Jérôme Bel
- Problem as a Choreographic and Philosophical Kind of Thought
- The Politics of Perception
- The Politics of Speaking about the Body
- Dancing Disabled: Phenomenology and Embodied Politics
- Of Corporeal Rewritings, Translations, and the Politics of Difference in Dancing
- Planning for Death’s Surprise: Pina Bausch and Merce Cunningham
- Dancing D-Day
- Dance and Politics in China: Interculturalism, Hybridity, and the ArtsCross Project
- Between the Cultural Center and the Villa : Dance, Neoliberalism, and Silent Borders in Buenos Aires
- Modern Dance in the Third Reich, Redux
- The Micropolitics of Exchange: Exile and Otherness after the Nation
- <i>Black Swan</i>, White Nose
- Brown in Black and White: José Limón Dances The Emperor Jones
- Switch: Queer Social Dance, Political Leadership, and Black Popular Culture
- Politics of Fake It!: Janez Janša Interviewed by Janez Janša
- Identity Politics and Political Will: Jeni LeGon Living in a Great Big Way
- Dancing in the Here and Now: Indigenous Presence and the Choreography of Emily Johnson/Catalyst and DANCING EARTH
- Dance and Eastern Europe: Contemporary Dance in the Time of Transition
- Domesticating Dance: South Asian Filmic Bodies Negotiating New Moves in Neoliberalism
- Is It OK to Dance on Graves?: Modernism and Socialist Realism Revisited
- Index
Abstract and Keywords
This chapter accounts for a distinctive kind of thought, born in and through European dance since the mid-1990s, which has thoroughly transformed choreography and performance by reinventing performed relations between the body, movement, and time under the theme of “problems.” The practice of this thought is rooted in the problematization of specific concerns within contemporary theater dance, such as the body-movement bind with respect to expression and form, improvisation and processuality, or spectatorship. Most important, its forte lies in introducing a method of creation by way of problem-posing, which merits philosophical attention. Choreographing problems involves composing ruptures between movement, the body and duration in performance such that they engender a shock upon sensibility, one that inhibits recognition. Thus problems “force” thinking as an exercise of the limits of sensibility that can be accounted for not by representation, but by the principle of expression that Gilles Deleuze develops from Spinoza’s philosophy.
Keywords: choreography, body-movement bind, expression, objectivation, choreographic idea, critique of theatrical representation
P.A.R.T.S.
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- The Oxford Handbook of Dance and Politics
- Dedication
- Acknowledgments
- List of Contributors
- Introduction
- Tracking the Political Economy of Dance
- Dance and/as Competition in the Privately Owned US Studio
- Racing in Place: A Meta-Memoir on Dance Politics and Practice
- Epiphanic Moments: Dancing Politics
- Performing Collectively
- Urban Choreographies: Artistic Interventions and the Politics of Urban Space
- The Politics of Speculative Imagination in Contemporary Choreography
- Toward a Choreo-Political Theory of Articulation
- Rehearsing In-Difference: The Politics of Aesthetics in the Performances of Pina Bausch and Jérôme Bel
- Problem as a Choreographic and Philosophical Kind of Thought
- The Politics of Perception
- The Politics of Speaking about the Body
- Dancing Disabled: Phenomenology and Embodied Politics
- Of Corporeal Rewritings, Translations, and the Politics of Difference in Dancing
- Planning for Death’s Surprise: Pina Bausch and Merce Cunningham
- Dancing D-Day
- Dance and Politics in China: Interculturalism, Hybridity, and the ArtsCross Project
- Between the Cultural Center and the Villa : Dance, Neoliberalism, and Silent Borders in Buenos Aires
- Modern Dance in the Third Reich, Redux
- The Micropolitics of Exchange: Exile and Otherness after the Nation
- <i>Black Swan</i>, White Nose
- Brown in Black and White: José Limón Dances The Emperor Jones
- Switch: Queer Social Dance, Political Leadership, and Black Popular Culture
- Politics of Fake It!: Janez Janša Interviewed by Janez Janša
- Identity Politics and Political Will: Jeni LeGon Living in a Great Big Way
- Dancing in the Here and Now: Indigenous Presence and the Choreography of Emily Johnson/Catalyst and DANCING EARTH
- Dance and Eastern Europe: Contemporary Dance in the Time of Transition
- Domesticating Dance: South Asian Filmic Bodies Negotiating New Moves in Neoliberalism
- Is It OK to Dance on Graves?: Modernism and Socialist Realism Revisited
- Index