On Multiple Appearances: An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson’s Drift

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On Multiple Appearances : An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson’s Drift. / Bork Petersen, Franziska.

I: Nordic Theatre Studies, Bind 24, 2012, s. 44-53.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

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APA

Vancouver

Bork Petersen F. On Multiple Appearances: An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson’s Drift. Nordic Theatre Studies. 2012;24:44-53.

Author

Bork Petersen, Franziska. / On Multiple Appearances : An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson’s Drift. I: Nordic Theatre Studies. 2012 ; Bind 24. s. 44-53.

Bibtex

@article{2dc2297f691b4a629220436daf3c7a5e,
title = "On Multiple Appearances: An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson{\textquoteright}s Drift",
abstract = "In the article I challenge the prevalent usage of phenomenology in dance scholarship that explores the dancer{\textquoteright}s experience of her body when dancing. The approach often implies the problematic assumption that the dancers{\textquoteright} experience is immediately transferred to spectators who are in turn universally {\textquoteleft}moved{\textquoteright} by the dancing bodies. Instead of acknowledging dance as a product of historically and culturally specific circumstances, such an analytical perspective ultimately mystifies dance. The article proposes a different usage of analytical tools in dance scholarship: I employ phenomenological reduction and epoch{\'e} to focus on how dancing bodies appear in a stage context. To test these tools{\textquoteright} ability to explore dancing bodies from a third-person perspective, I analyse the Danish choreographer Kitt Johnson{\textquoteright}s solo performance Drift (2011) - focussing on her shifting physical appearance. While phenomenology helps me to describe the multiple and radically different guises that Johnson assumes in her piece, my analysis, ultimately, does not aim to distil a truer, more real being from her appearances as is often the case in phenomenological philosophy. I complement my analytical approach with the Deleuzian notion of becoming animal and suggest that Johnson stages what could, in Judith Butler{\textquoteright}s terms, be called a critical contingency of bodily appearance. ",
author = "{Bork Petersen}, Franziska",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "44--53",
journal = "Nordic Theatre Studies",
issn = "0905-6380",
publisher = "F{\"o}reningen Nordiska Teaterforskare",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - On Multiple Appearances

T2 - An Analysis of the Performing Body in Kitt Johnson’s Drift

AU - Bork Petersen, Franziska

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - In the article I challenge the prevalent usage of phenomenology in dance scholarship that explores the dancer’s experience of her body when dancing. The approach often implies the problematic assumption that the dancers’ experience is immediately transferred to spectators who are in turn universally ‘moved’ by the dancing bodies. Instead of acknowledging dance as a product of historically and culturally specific circumstances, such an analytical perspective ultimately mystifies dance. The article proposes a different usage of analytical tools in dance scholarship: I employ phenomenological reduction and epoché to focus on how dancing bodies appear in a stage context. To test these tools’ ability to explore dancing bodies from a third-person perspective, I analyse the Danish choreographer Kitt Johnson’s solo performance Drift (2011) - focussing on her shifting physical appearance. While phenomenology helps me to describe the multiple and radically different guises that Johnson assumes in her piece, my analysis, ultimately, does not aim to distil a truer, more real being from her appearances as is often the case in phenomenological philosophy. I complement my analytical approach with the Deleuzian notion of becoming animal and suggest that Johnson stages what could, in Judith Butler’s terms, be called a critical contingency of bodily appearance.

AB - In the article I challenge the prevalent usage of phenomenology in dance scholarship that explores the dancer’s experience of her body when dancing. The approach often implies the problematic assumption that the dancers’ experience is immediately transferred to spectators who are in turn universally ‘moved’ by the dancing bodies. Instead of acknowledging dance as a product of historically and culturally specific circumstances, such an analytical perspective ultimately mystifies dance. The article proposes a different usage of analytical tools in dance scholarship: I employ phenomenological reduction and epoché to focus on how dancing bodies appear in a stage context. To test these tools’ ability to explore dancing bodies from a third-person perspective, I analyse the Danish choreographer Kitt Johnson’s solo performance Drift (2011) - focussing on her shifting physical appearance. While phenomenology helps me to describe the multiple and radically different guises that Johnson assumes in her piece, my analysis, ultimately, does not aim to distil a truer, more real being from her appearances as is often the case in phenomenological philosophy. I complement my analytical approach with the Deleuzian notion of becoming animal and suggest that Johnson stages what could, in Judith Butler’s terms, be called a critical contingency of bodily appearance.

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 44

EP - 53

JO - Nordic Theatre Studies

JF - Nordic Theatre Studies

SN - 0905-6380

ER -

ID: 142583329