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Choreographic re-embodiment between text and dance

Abstract:
This chapter explores the aesthetics of the experimental modernist fiction of Joseph Conrad and Samuel Beckett to open up debates about reenactment of dance in the twentieth century. Using the theories of Gabriele Brandstetter and Paul Ricoeur to explore correspondences in dance and literary skepticism about narrative, the discussion shows how both writers interpolate their stories with fleeting passages of gesture or movement phrases that syncopate and undermine the teleological flow of narrative. This discussion suggests a choreographic re-embodiment between dance and text that focuses on communication beyond words. The similarity of Conrad and Beckett lies in their uses of gesture, but while Conrad’s movement phrases re-embody early twentieth-century expressivism, Beckett’s look back to early twentieth-century innovations in abstraction which examine the mechanical function of the body, rhythm in time and space. Beckett does not reference a mental (or emotional) state, whereas Conrad’s gestures are affective, identifying an emotional interiority.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Reviewed (other)

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Publisher copy:
10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199314201.013.26

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
HUMS
Department:
English Faculty
Oxford college:
St Hilda's College
Role:
Author

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Role:
Editor


Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Host title:
Oxford Handbook of Dance and Reenactment
Publication date:
2017-12-01
DOI:
ISBN-10:
0199314209
ISBN-13:
9780199314201


Keywords:
Pubs id:
pubs:827108
UUID:
uuid:fb4d2356-ec7b-4958-9d0a-11c3b9ff156c
Local pid:
pubs:827108
Source identifiers:
827108
Deposit date:
2018-06-03

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