Taken by Surprise : A Dance Improvisation Reader

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Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2003-10-24
Publisher(s): Wesleyan Univ Pr
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Summary

This collection of classic and new writings on dance improvisation brings together 21 essays by prominent dancers, scholars and historians. Until now, discussion of improvisation in dance has focused mainly on the postmodern form known as contact improv. Taken by Surprise reflects the development of improvisation as a compositional and performance mode in a wide variety of dance contexts, including dance traditions from around the globe, such as Yoruban masked dance, Indian Bharatanatyam and flamenco. The book also includes a thoughtful look at computer-aided choreography, a discussion of recent innovations in tap dancing and a section on improvisation in everyday life. Combining primary sources with critical analysis, Taken by Surprise will serve as an indispensible companion to studio work in improvisation, and a much-needed supplement to twentieth century dance histories. CONTRIBUTORS: Ann Cooper Albright, Sally Banes, Bruce Curtis, Kent Despain, Margaret Thompson Drewal, Simone Forti, Susan Leigh Foster, David Gere, Raymond W. Gibbs, JR, Michelle Heffner Hayes, Carmela Hermann, Constance Valis Hill, Rachel Kaplan, Maura Keefe, Victoria Marks, Avanthi Meduri, Steve Paxton, Janice Ross, Karen Schaffman, Nancy Stark Smith, Ellen Webb, Ruth Zaporah.

Author Biography

ANN COOPER ALBRIGHT is Associate Professor of Dance at Oberlin College and author of Choreographing Difference (Wesleyan, 1997). DAVID GERE is Assistant Professor at University of California at Los Angeles's Department of World Arts and Cultures and co-editor of Looking Out: Perspectives on Dance and Criticism in a Multicultural World (1995).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xiii
David Gere
IMPROVISING BODY, IMPROVISING MIND
Taken by Surprise
Improvisation in Dance and Mind
3(10)
Susan Leigh Foster
Exposed to Gravity
13(76)
Bruce Curtis
Dance
A Body with a Mind of Its Own
21(6)
Ruth Zaporah
The Cutting Edge of Awareness
Reports from the Inside of Improvisation
27(14)
Kent De Spain
A DUET WITH POSTMODERN DANCE
Anna Halprin and Improvisation as Child's Play
A Search for Informed Innocence
41(12)
Janice Ross
Animate Dancing
A Practice in Dance Improvisation
53(12)
Simone Forti
Learning to Speak
An Apprenticeship with Simone Forti in Logomotion
65(12)
Carmela Hermann
Spontaneous Combustion
Notes on Dance Improvisation from the Sixties to the Nineties
77(12)
Sally Banes
EXPANDING THE CANON
Stepping, Stealing, Sharing, and Daring
89(64)
Improvisation and the Tap Dance Challenge
89(16)
Constance Valis Hill
The Writing on the Wall
Reading Improvisation in Flamenco and Postmodern Dance
105(14)
Michelle Heffner Hayes
Improvisation as Participatory Performance
Egungun Masked Dancers in the Yoruba Tradition
119(16)
Margaret Thompson Drewal
Against Improvisation
A Postmodernist Makes the Case for Choreography
135(6)
Victoria Marks
Multiple Pleasures
Improvisation in Bharatanatyam
141(12)
Avanthi Meduri
RECONSIDERING CONTACT IMPROVISATION
A Subjective History of Contact Improvisation
153(22)
Nancy Stark Smith
Drafting Interior Techniques
175(10)
Steve Paxton
Embodied Meanings in Performing, Interpreting, and Talking about Dance Improvisation
185(30)
Raymond W. Gibbs, Jr.
Weighting Metaphors
A Response to Raymond W. Gibbs and ``Hilary''
197(8)
Karen Schaffman
Present Tense
Contact Improvisation at Twenty-Five
205(10)
Ann Cooper Albright
IMPROVISATION IN EVERYDAY LIFE
Some Traveler's Tales
215(30)
Rachel Kaplan
What's the Score?
Structured Improvisation as National Pastime
229(10)
Maura Keefe
For the Taste of an Apple
Why I Practice Zen
239(6)
Ellen Webb
Life Scores
245(12)
Nancy Stark Smith
EPILOGUE
Dwelling in Possibility
257(10)
Ann Cooper Albright
Contributors 267(6)
Index 273

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