Codes of dance improvisation: The case of Intuitive Dance
Kódy taneční improvizace: Případ Intuitivního Tance
diploma thesis (DEFENDED)
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http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11956/91151Identifiers
Study Information System: 174253
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- Kvalifikační práce [6715]
Author
Advisor
Referee
Marcelli, Miroslav
Faculty / Institute
Faculty of Humanities
Discipline
Electronic Culture and Semiotics
Department
Department of Electronic Culture and Semiotics
Date of defense
14. 9. 2017
Publisher
Univerzita Karlova, Fakulta humanitních studiíLanguage
English
Grade
Very good
Keywords (Czech)
improvizace, Intuitivní Tanec, semiotika, zápis, gesto, Nelson Goodman, Walter Benjamin, tanec, kódKeywords (English)
improvisation, Intuitive Dance, semiotics, notation, gesture, Nelson Goodman, Walter Benjamin, dance, codeThe idea that dance can be understood as an act of communication and a form of language has been already taken into account by scholars. The hypothesis that will be discussed in this MA dissertation concerns a more specific matter: a semiotic approach to different forms of dance improvisation, and notably the method traditionally labeled "intuitive dance". To understand this phenomena two main concepts will be conveyed: that of "quotation" understood via W. Benjamin's essays on Brecht, and that of "notation", as defined by N. Goodman in his Languages of art. Can we understand dance as a language - id est a quotable and notable code - even in its more intuitive forms? How is it possible to "understand", "quote" and "address" gestures, even in front of a wide heterogeneous audience and without any prefixed choreography but only on the base of a free and in-time creating process? Can we understand improvisation as a complex code? what and how does this code mean? Keywords: improvisation, Intuitive Dance, semiotics, notation, gesture, Nelson Goodman, Walter Benjamin, dance, code
The idea that dance can be understood as an act of communication and a form of language has been already taken into account by scholars. The hypothesis that will be discussed in this MA dissertation concerns a more specific matter: a semiotic approach to different forms of dance improvisation, and notably the method traditionally labeled "intuitive dance". To understand this phenomena two main concepts will be conveyed: that of "quotation" understood via W. Benjamin's essays on Brecht, and that of "notation", as defined by N. Goodman in his Languages of art. Can we understand dance as a language - id est a quotable and notable code - even in its more intuitive forms? How is it possible to "understand", "quote" and "address" gestures, even in front of a wide heterogeneous audience and without any prefixed choreography but only on the base of a free and in-time creating process? Can we understand improvisation as a complex code? what and how does this code mean? Keywords: improvisation, Intuitive Dance, semiotics, notation, gesture, Nelson Goodman, Walter Benjamin, dance, code