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引用次数: 1
摘要
卡罗尔·布朗(Carol Brown)和托马斯·坎佩(Thomas Kampe)与新西兰舞蹈团(NZDC)的舞者合作开展的研究项目“释放档案”(Release the Archive)的第二部分旨在讨论格特鲁德·博登维泽(Gertrud Bodenwiser,1890年维也纳-1959年悉尼)作品的当代身体信息再传播作为文化修复行为的概念。这篇文章通过历史文本和舞者的笔记本,揭示了格特鲁德·博登维泽的流散作品是如何受到现代主义身体文化先驱贝斯·门森迪克(约1866-1957)的影响,旨在构建一种身体现实主义的实践,关注对二十世纪西方人格的解放视角。作者讨论了作为批判过程的博登维瑟身体实践的原始身体和原始女权主义根源,并揭示了博登维泽基于发现的教学法是如何在合作创作模式中邀请和培养舞者的身心能动性的。这篇文章批评了Feldenkrais方法作为一种当代身体模式的应用,以支持重新出现的狂喜和古怪的高度动态的身体编码。它将《释放档案》作为一种跨文化和代际的表达,来接受几乎被遗忘的欧洲流亡舞蹈遗产的复杂性。
Entangled histories, part 2: Releasing the de-generate body
This second part of writing on the research project Releasing the Archive, undertaken by Carol Brown and Thomas Kampe in collaboration with dancers of New Zealand Dance Company (NZDC), aims to discuss notions of contemporary somaticinformed re-transmission of the work of Gertrud Bodenwieser (Vienna 1890 – Sydney 1959) as acts of cultural repair. The article unpacks, through historical texts and dancers’ notebooks, how the diasporic work of Gertrud Bodenwieser, influenced by Modernist body-culture pioneer Bess Mensendieck (c. 1866–1957 ), aimed to construct a practice of somatic realism concerned with emancipatory perspectives on twentieth century western personhood. The author discusses proto-somatic and proto-feminist roots of Bodenwieser’s corporeal practices as critical processes, and reveals how Bodenwieser’s discovery-based pedagogies invite and foster dancers’ psycho-physical agency within collaborative modes of creation. The article critiques the application of The Feldenkrais Method as a contemporary somatic modality to support the revitalizing of a re-emerging ecstatic and eccentric highly dynamic bodycoding. It contextualizes Releasing the Archive as a trans-cultural and intergenerational articulation of coming to terms with the complexities of a nearly forgotten European exiled dance legacy.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Dance and Somatic Practices is an international refereed journal published twice a year. It has been in publication since 2009 for scholars and practitioners whose research interests focus on the relationship between dance and somatic practices, and the influence that this body of practice exerts on the wider performing arts. In recent years, somatic practices have become more central to many artists'' work and have become more established within educational and training programmes. Despite this, as a body of work it has remained largely at the margins of scholarly debate, finding its presence predominantly through the embodied knowledge of practitioners and their performative contributions. This journal provides a space to debate the work, to consider the impact and influence of the work on performance and discuss the implications for research and teaching. The journal serves a broad international community and invites contributions from a wide range of discipline areas. Particular features include writings that consciously traverse the boundaries between text and performance, taking the form of ‘visual essays'', interviews with leading practitioners, book reviews, themed issues and conference/symposium reports.