2011
DOI: 10.1017/s0149767711000040
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Phenomenology and Dance: Husserlian Meditations

Abstract: The dimming of the house lights focuses attention on the still darkened stage, although awareness of the others in the auditorium and its quieted bustle does not entirely fade. From the stage, the sound of several people taking five or six measured footsteps in unison, then stopping, momentarily precedes the lights (stage and house) fading quickly up to reveal nine performers. They stand, facing out, dressed in ordinary clothes (shirt and jacket, jumper and skirt, different colors), steady gaze directed at the… Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Addressing and promoting the processes that help to more effectively tap into elderly people's social capital is a civilisational challenge today. This provides the background against which the explorations of social theorists and philosophers [28][29][30][31]-in particular Habermas-prove highly pertinent and universal.…”
Section: Theoretical Assumptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Addressing and promoting the processes that help to more effectively tap into elderly people's social capital is a civilisational challenge today. This provides the background against which the explorations of social theorists and philosophers [28][29][30][31]-in particular Habermas-prove highly pertinent and universal.…”
Section: Theoretical Assumptionsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a result, phenomenology creates important openings for epistemological questions regarding how dancers perceive, intuit, and experience knowledge through dance. In describing what phenomenology offers to dance writers, Pakes (2011) observes that a phenomenological approach provides a 'fresh look at dance phenomena; it proposes a first person account, descriptive rather than constructively theoretical; and it focuses on those phenomena as they appear or are directly apprehended, once preconceptions and prejudgments about the dance have been suspended' (35). Phenomenology thus creates a compelling lens for dance practitioners and dance scholars to examine how dance is experienced.…”
Section: Phenomenological Embodimentmentioning
confidence: 99%