Philosophy of dance
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Philosophy of dance
(Midwest studies in philosophy, v. 44)
Wiley Periodicals, c2019
Available at 1 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This volume brings together new work in the philosophy of dance for a general philosophical audience. Scholars working across the fields of philosophy, dance studies, and related areas explore the nature of dance as a practice and an artform. This collection of essays covers topics such as the experience of dancing, the nature and appreciation of dance artworks, and the distinctive contribution of dance to philosophical understanding.
Table of Contents
1 Renee Conroy, "Dances, Danceworks, and Choreographic Works: A Plea for Conceptual Clarity"
2 Carrie Noland, "'Like-Sensing Subjects': Husserl and Dance"
3 Barbara Montero, "The Paradox of Post-Performance Amnesia"
4 Jonathan Owen Clark, "Image Consciousness, Movement Consciousness"
5 Noel Carroll, "Some Stabs at the Ontology of Dance"
6 Julie Van Camp, "Identity in Dance: What Happened?"
7 Graham McFee, "Audiences Appreciating Dances"
8 David Davies, "Dance Seen and Dance-Screened"
9 Paul Thom, "On Dancers as Coauthors"
10 Richard Shusterman, "Dance as Art, Theatre, and Practice"
11 Andy Hamilton, "Rhythm and Movement: The Conceptual Interdependence of Music, Dance and Poetry"
12 Aili Bresnahan, "Is Tap Dance A Form of Jazz Percussion?"
13 Anna Pakes, "Can There Be Conceptual Dance?"
14 Troy Jollimore, "Beauty Always Dies: The Philosophical Significance of Non-Enduring Artworks"
15 Barry Allen, "Three Kinds of Movement"
16 Maxine Sheets-Johnstone, "Movement: Its Centrality in Natural History and Its Lifelong Significance: What Evolution (and Gesture) Can Teach Us"
17 Kristin Boyce, "Beyond Petipa and Before the Academy: Plato, Socrates and Alexi Ratmansky's Serenade After Plato's Symposium"
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