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Title
Jonathan Burrows : towards a minor dance / Daniela Perazzo Domm.
ISBN
9783030276805 (electronic book)
3030276805 (electronic book)
3030276791
9783030276799
Published
Cham : Palgrave Macmillan, [2019]
Copyright
©2019
Language
English
Description
1 online resource.
Call Number
GV1782.5 .D66 2019eb
Dewey Decimal Classification
792.8/2
Summary
The first monograph on the work of British choreographer Jonathan Burrows, this book examines his artistic practice and poetics as articulated through his choreographic works, his writings and his contributions to current performance debates. It considers the contexts, principles and modalities of his choreography, from his early pieces in the 1980s, to his latest collaborative projects, providing detailed analyses of his dances and reflecting on his unique choreomusical partnership with composer Matteo Fargion. Known for its emphasis on gesture and humorous quality, and characterised by compositional clarity and rhythmical patterns, Burrows artistic work takes the language of choreography to its limits and engages in a paradoxical, and hence transformative, relationship with dances historical and normative structures. Exploring the ways in which Burrows and Fargions poetics articulates movement, performative presence and the collaborative process in a minor register, this study conceptualises the work as a politically compelling practice that destabilises major traditions from a minoritarian position.
Note
Includes index.
Access Note
Access limited to authorized users.
Source of Description
Online resource; title from PDF title page (SpringerLink, viewed December 4, 2019).
Series
New world choreographies.
Available in Other Form
Print version: 9783030276799
1.Dance and/as poiesis, poetry, poetics
2.Resisting from within: Dance canons and their deterritorialisation
3.Reduction, repetition, returns: The trouble of minimalism
4.Rhythm as friendship: Movement, music and Matteo
5.Duets and (self-)portraits: Choreographing the im/personal
6.Choreographies of plurality: Rethinking collaboration and collectivity
7.Towards a politics of poetry, gesture and laughter.