Gestural Imaginaries Gestural Imaginaries

Gestural Imaginaries

Dance and Cultural Theory in the Early Twentieth Century

    • 54,99 €
    • 54,99 €

Publisher Description

Gestural Imaginaries: Dance and Cultural Theory in the Early Twentieth Century offers a new interpretation of European modernist dance by addressing it as guiding medium in a vibrant field of gestural culture that ranged across art and philosophy. Taking further Cornelius Castoriadis's concept of the social imaginary, it explores this imaginary's embodied forms. Close readings of dances, photographs, and literary texts are juxtaposed with discussions of gestural theory by thinkers including Walter Benjamin, Sigmund Freud, and Aby Warburg. Choreographic gesture is defined as a force of intermittency that creates a new theoretical status of dance. Author Lucia Ruprecht shows how this also bears on contemporary theory. She shifts emphasis from Giorgio Agamben's preoccupation with gestural mediality to Jacques Ranci?re's multiplicity of proliferating, singular gestures, arguing for their ethical and political relevance. Mobilizing dance history and movement analysis, Ruprecht highlights the critical impact of works by choreographers such as Vaslav Nijinsky, Jo Mihaly, and Alexander and Clotilde Sakharoff. She also offers choreographic readings of Franz Kafka and Alfred D?blin. Gestural Imaginaries proposes that modernist dance conducts a gestural revolution which enacts but also exceeds the insights of past and present cultural theory. It makes a case for archive-based, cross-medial, and critically informed dance studies, transnational German studies, and the theoretical potential of performance itself.

GENRE
Arts & Entertainment
RELEASED
2019
4 June
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
352
Pages
PUBLISHER
Oxford University Press
SIZE
4.1
MB

More Books by Lucia Ruprecht

Dances of the Self in Heinrich von Kleist, E.T.A. Hoffmann and Heinrich Heine Dances of the Self in Heinrich von Kleist, E.T.A. Hoffmann and Heinrich Heine
2017
New German Dance Studies New German Dance Studies
2012