181 resultados para dancers
Resumo:
The article investigates the intriguing interplay of digital comics and live-action elements in a detailed performance analysis of TeZukA (2011) by choreographer Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui. This dance theatre production enacts the life story of Osamu Tezuka and some of his famous manga characters, interweaving performers and musicians with large-scale projections of the mangaka’s digitised comics. During the show, the dancers perform different ‘readings’ of the projected manga imagery: e.g. they swipe panels as if using portable touchscreen displays, move synchronously to animated speed lines, and create the illusion of being drawn into the stories depicted on the screen. The main argument is that TeZukA makes visible, demonstrates and reflects upon different ways of delivering, reading and interacting with digital comics. In order to verify this argument, the paper uses ideas developed in comics and theatre studies to draw more specifically on the use of digital comics in this particular performance.
Resumo:
El presente trabajo analiza la cuestión de la gracia en el breve relato kleistiano “Acerca del teatro de las marionetas". El problema filosófico que allí se presenta es el de la posibilidad de que un cuerpo artificial como el del muñeco articulado adquiera una gracia que el cuerpo propio del ser humano no podría alcanzar jamás, aun en el caso de los mejores bailarines. Nos proponemos entonces el desafío de pensar de qué modo debe ser pensada la relación entre los cuerpos y el conocimiento para que tal fenómeno sea posible. Sostendremos que la noción de gracia constituye en este texto el modo kleistiano de construir una línea de fuga frente a su interpretación de Kant.
Resumo:
Este plan se propone indagar cómo se construyen las concepciones del cuerpo en la práctica de la danza escénica occidental, a partir del análisis de fuentes bibliográficas escritas por maestros coreógrafos y bailarines del siglo XX. En este sentido, la danza opera como instancia de recorte específico sobre un tema más general; el de construir un aporte a los desarrollos de una teoría social del cuerpo, de reciente formación en nuestro país, en base al análisis de unos referentes empíricos concretos. Se espera poder construir líneas de análisis fructíferas que, en base a la deconstrucción del saber generado en el campo de las prácticas específicas a observar y su re-construcción con eje en los elementos de la teoría social contemporánea, articulen el problema y análisis del cuerpo, con tópicos básicos del análisis sociológico: la cuestión de la subjetividad, las nuevas formas de auto-dominio y auto-control y la cuestión de las prácticas o experiencias autónomas y disruptivas.
Resumo:
Este plan se propone indagar cómo se construyen las concepciones del cuerpo en la práctica de la danza escénica occidental, a partir del análisis de fuentes bibliográficas escritas por maestros coreógrafos y bailarines del siglo XX. En este sentido, la danza opera como instancia de recorte específico sobre un tema más general; el de construir un aporte a los desarrollos de una teoría social del cuerpo, de reciente formación en nuestro país, en base al análisis de unos referentes empíricos concretos. Se espera poder construir líneas de análisis fructíferas que, en base a la deconstrucción del saber generado en el campo de las prácticas específicas a observar y su re-construcción con eje en los elementos de la teoría social contemporánea, articulen el problema y análisis del cuerpo, con tópicos básicos del análisis sociológico: la cuestión de la subjetividad, las nuevas formas de auto-dominio y auto-control y la cuestión de las prácticas o experiencias autónomas y disruptivas.
Resumo:
Este plan se propone indagar cómo se construyen las concepciones del cuerpo en la práctica de la danza escénica occidental, a partir del análisis de fuentes bibliográficas escritas por maestros coreógrafos y bailarines del siglo XX. En este sentido, la danza opera como instancia de recorte específico sobre un tema más general; el de construir un aporte a los desarrollos de una teoría social del cuerpo, de reciente formación en nuestro país, en base al análisis de unos referentes empíricos concretos. Se espera poder construir líneas de análisis fructíferas que, en base a la deconstrucción del saber generado en el campo de las prácticas específicas a observar y su re-construcción con eje en los elementos de la teoría social contemporánea, articulen el problema y análisis del cuerpo, con tópicos básicos del análisis sociológico: la cuestión de la subjetividad, las nuevas formas de auto-dominio y auto-control y la cuestión de las prácticas o experiencias autónomas y disruptivas.
Resumo:
The objective of the present study was to compare the effects of dance participation on physical and psychological functioning as perceived by two distinct groups of dancers: dancers with Parkinson's disease (PD) and healthy amateur (HA) dancers. Dancers in the Parkinson's sample group were gathered from participants in the Dance for PD® program, while healthy amateur dancers were recruited from university dance departments and through social media. Both groups were administered measures related to affect, self-efficacy, quality of life, and which aspects of dance classes were most helpful and/or challenging. Several open-ended questions for both groups were included, along with questions specific to each group. Results of the study indicated that there was no difference between the two groups on positive affect experienced while dancing, but that HA dancers experienced higher levels of negative affect than PD dancers. HA dancers exhibited higher levels of self-efficacy, but there was no difference between the groups on perceived quality of life. Additionally, both groups identified the same two components of dance classes as the most helpful: "moving and getting some exercise" and "doing something fun." Thematic analysis of responses to open-ended questions found that, in general, HA and PD dancers identified similar factors which made dance unique from other forms of exercise. The primary differences were that HA dancers more strongly emphasized artistic and spiritual components of dance, whereas PD dancers focused on the importance of the dance instructors and tailoring movements to individuals with PD. More differences were found between the two groups with respect to the negative aspects of dance classes. Notably, PD dancers identified almost no negative aspects, while HA dancers described internal and external pressure, criticism, and competition as problematic. Future research could benefit from ensuring that both groups are administered the same standardized measures to allow for additional comparisons between groups and with normative samples.
Resumo:
"Under one roof."--"September, 1914."-- Santa Susanna.--A Roman Christmas.--A "Romana di Roma."--Signora Pistocchi and the tragedy of the Bathursts.--Dancers and musicians.--Louis XVIII and the seer of Gallardon.--Concerning Louis XVII and his family.--Countess Charlotte Kielmansegge: a Napoleonic mystery.--A fairy tale - and an earthquake.--Pictures and places.
Resumo:
On verso: Dance-52. Three women dancers
Resumo:
This article utilises participant observation, interview and collaborative visual data, collected with women erotic dancers, management and customers, to ascertain how far heteronormativity is subverted in a UK lesbian leisure space, Lippy (the name is a pseudonym), which provides erotic dance for women customers. The potential for a female 'gaze', the 'normativity' of gendered and sexualised bodies, and the notion of a 'women's space' are taken as areas for analysis. Women's engagement with erotic dance is complex, and this article examines the connections between sexual agency and gendered power relations, questioning how far women can exercise autonomous sexual expression in commercial sexual encounters. © The Author(s) 2012.
Resumo:
This article analyses a range of different meanings attached to images of erotic dance, with a particular focus on the 'impression management' (Goffman 1959) enacted by dancers. It presents a visual analysis of the work of a female erotic performer in a lesbian erotic dance venue in the UK. Still photographs, along with observational data and interviews, convey the complexity and skill of an erotic dancer's diverse gendered and sexualised performances. The visual data highlights the extensive 'aesthetic labour' (Nickson et al. 2001) and 'emotional labour' (Hochschild 1983) the dancer must put in to constructing her work 'self'. However, a more ambitious use of the visual is identified: the dancer's own use of images of her work. This use of the visual by dancers themselves highlights a more complex 'impression management' strategy undertaken by a dancer and brings into question the separation of 'real' and 'work' 'selves' in erotic dance. © Sociological Research Online, 1996-2012.
Resumo:
The rise of male strip shows marketed towards heterosexual women has called into question the idea that only men can 'gaze' or be 'sexual scrutinizers' in public leisure spaces. This paper details the findings of an ethnographic study of a male strip event 'Cheeky's',1 located in the Midlands, England. Utilising observation, informal interviews and photography, the paper describes the physical environment and the atmosphere of the event, and analyses interview data with female customers. The paper questions what spaces such as Cheeky's mean for female sexualities, sexual roles and desires. The findings are twofold. On the one hand the club was a relatively novel sexual space, as some women spectators experienced it as an 'empowering' space in which they could be 'sexually aggressive'; on the other hand, the character of the club was actively and adeptly manufactured by the Master of Ceremonies (MC), and male dancers, so as to encourage - and even to coercively elicit - extrovert behaviour from women customers. Despite shifting normative gendered expectations of women's sexual behaviour to some extent, ultimately the club structured women's sexual experiences around traditional heterosexist lines. The club did not encourage women's autonomous sexual expression, and many women claimed they had not found it a very 'sexy space'. © 2011 Taylor & Francis.
Resumo:
This paper seeks to characterise the gendered and sexualised power relations of both female and male strip clubs, and to signal what this means for establishing positive definitions of female desire. It is argued that while it is not useful to present female strippers, or female patrons of male strip clubs as purely passive victims of male heterosexism within these venues, it is equally damaging to assume that these venues represent a whole-scale challenge to conventional oppressive gender and sexual relations for women. Some research has even suggested that both strippers and their patrons are engaged in a 'mutually exploitative' power relationship. Moreover, further empirical research documents key points where female dancers have perhaps wielded 'more' power over patrons at certain moments, and female dancers have highlighted feelings of empowerment and highlighted potential for gender and sexual relations which position women as passive to be subverted within stripping. However, such feelings are often temporally specific and are not applicable to all women in the strip industry. It may be particularly hard for these to manifest in women concentrated in the least economically-rewarding areas of the industry who have less 'power' to resist compromising their bodily boundaries. Furthermore, it is argued that women watching male strippers does little to reverse the 'male gaze', and nor does this male occupation carry as much negative social stigma with it as female stripping suffers. It is thus argued that the overwhelming picture, stemming largely from accounts of former dancers and from empirical studies of individual clubs, suggests these venues in fact do very little to challenge normative hetero-oppressive sexual scripts.
Resumo:
The purpose of this research was to design and implement a Series of Latin Shows to be featured at the Satine Restaurant located in The Diplomat Hotel in Hollywood, Florida. Three shows were created: "Electro Tango," "Bossa Nova Jazz," and "Piel Canela Night" to help generate interest for not only the Satine Restaurant but also for the surrounding area. The artistic concept included big bands, costumes, dancers and a DJ. A production book was created and included the most important aspects of the individual shows such as budgets, costumes, and ground plans, to assure the success of each event. Careful analysis was done for the demographic area and a marketing plan was designed and implemented. The research and practical application of similar shows in the industry determined that the production of these particular shows, although costly, have a qualifiable chance to succeed in this venue.
Resumo:
This research is a study that deals with the language of the players bodies of Ciranda (a typical dance in circle in Brazil) – more specifically the one of Lia from Itamaracá. Our interest is to observe how this body dances, communicates, writes on time and space, establishing relations that complement and help to remain in construction. Thus, in a circular way and in an energy that is transmitted with the contact of the touch of the hands, in the power of song, in a circle that can be seen from many places, but by different angles, holding on that the particularities of its subjects players/dancers/observers, and that we propose ourselves to think: who are those players bodies and how do they build the circles of Ciranda? Therefore, during the pathway of the research, we were conducted by the phenomenological method and, from this, used the concepts of lived and sensible world. Our interest in this manifestation is, also, the body that dances and insert itself in the artistic expression, meaning and opening itself to the knowledge by the experience. Therefore, we assume a conception of the body that refers itself in the merleaupontyana fenomenologic approach, in this way, in its criativity in relation to the body as a fragmented being, as it is pointed by the Cartesiana theory. In this perspective, we understand the body in its relations with the culturals, sociais, economics and artistics issues that integrates it, in others words, in the relations that helped us to better understand the body as it is. This way, this research has as main objective to present the refletions about the players body, mainly, of Lia from Itamaracá and with this body to dance, to communicate, to write itself on time and space, estabilishing relations that complement and help to stay in construction. Such a statement leads us in this work, to inquire, for example: what mobilizes those subjects on this dance? We understand that elements as the place that is always in modification, the costumes, the musicality and the change in the movimentation of the players body in each new circle, those elements are factors that activate a permanente reconfiguration that are happening in the Ciranda dance nowadays. Finally, we assert that this investigation comes in reason to the big dimension that the Ciranda has achivied in Brazil, especially in the Northeast, as the existence of few references and registers of the reseach manifestation in the academic areas. It is possible to verify, in this research, that, in reason to this spreading, the nuances of the players bodies is even more diversified and that the missing of experiences on Itamaracá island - PE, its origin has putting away the original and community, becames, more and more, a dance of others stages and squares.