The relationship between the practice of dance and the technologies of representation has excited artists since the advent of film. Dancers, choreographers, and directors are increasingly drawn to screendance, the practice of capturing dance as a moving image mediated by a camera. While the interest in screendance has grown in importance and influence amongst artists, it has until now flown under the academic radar. Emmy-nominated director and auteur Douglas Rosenberg's groundbreaking book considers screendance as both a visual art form as well as an extension of modern and post-modern dance without drawing artificial boundaries between the two. Both a history and a critical framework, Screendance: Inscribing the Ephemeral Image is a new and important look at the subject. As he reconstructs the history and influences of screendance, Rosenberg presents a theoretical guide to navigating the boundaries of an inherently collaborative art form. Drawing on psycho-analytic, literary, materialist, queer, and feminist modes of analysis, Rosenberg explores the relationships between camera and subject, director and dancer, and the ephemeral nature of dance and the fixed nature of film. This interdisciplinary approach allows for a broader discussion of issues of hybridity and mediatized representation as they apply to dance on film. Rosenberg also discusses the audiences and venues of screendance and the tensions between commercial and fine-art cultures that the form has confronted in recent years. The surge of screendance festivals and courses at universities around the world has exposed the friction that exists between art, which is generally curated, and dance, which is generally programmed. Rosenberg explores the cultural implications of both methods of reaching audiences, and ultimately calls for a radical new way of thinking of both dance and film that engages with critical issues rather than simple advocacy.



Autorentext

Douglas Rosenberg is an artist and scholar working at the intersection of performance and media. He is internationally recognized as a pioneer in screendance both as director and as a theorist. He organized the first international symposium on screendance and is a founding editor of the International Journal of Screendance.



Inhalt

Acknowledgements Preface Introduction: Inscribing Hybridity Chapter 1: Archives and Architecture Chapter 2: Mediated Bodies: From Photography to Cine-Dance Chapter 3: Recorporealization and the Mediated Body Chapter 4: The Advent of Video Culture Chapter 5: The Bride is Dance Chapter 6: Excavating Genres Chapter 7: Curating the Practice Chapter 8: Seeing is Forgetting the Name of the Thing One Sees, or Connoisseurship in Screendance Chapter 9: Toward a Theory of Screendance Chapter 10: Negotiating the Academy Index

Titel
Screendance
Untertitel
Inscribing the Ephemeral Image
EAN
9780199773176
ISBN
978-0-19-977317-6
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Hersteller
Genre
Veröffentlichung
17.05.2012
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Dateigrösse
2.29 MB
Anzahl Seiten
336
Jahr
2012
Untertitel
Englisch