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Dance

Dance: Encyclopedia - Dance

Dance (from Old French dancier, perhaps from Frankish) generally refers to human movement either used as a form of expression (see also body language) or presented in a social, spiritual or performance setting. Dance is also used to describe methods of non-verbal communication between humans or animals (bee dance, mating dance), motion in inanimate objects (the leaves danced in the wind), and certain musical forms or genres. People who dance are called dancers and the act of dance is kn ...

Including:

Dance, Dance - Categories of dance, Dance - Choreography and notation, Dance - Dance and music, Dance - Dance studies, Dance - History of dance, Wikipedia:Dance basic topics, List of dance wikibooks, An American Ballroom Companion, Ballroom dance, Wikipedia:WikiProject Dance

Dance: Encyclopedia - Dance



Dance

Dance (from Old French dancier, perhaps from Frankish) generally refers to human movement either used as a form of expression (see also body language) or presented in a social, spiritual or performance setting.

Dance is also used to describe methods of non-verbal communication between humans or animals (bee dance, mating dance), motion in inanimate objects (the leaves danced in the wind), and certain musical forms or genres. People who dance are called dancers and the act of dance is known as dancing. An event where dancing takes place may be called a dance. Choreography is the art of making dances, and the person who does this is called a choreographer.

Definitions of what constitutes dance are dependent on social, cultural, aesthetic artistic and moral constraints and range from functional movement (such as Folk dance) to codified, virtuoso techniques such as ballet. In sports, gymnastics, figure skating and synchronized swimming there are dance disciplines while Martial arts 'kata' are often compared to dances. In 1926, William Butler Yeats wrote, in "Among School Children": How can we know the dancer from the dance?

Dance - History of dance

Main article: History of dance

Throughout history, dance has been a part of ceremony, rituals, celebrations and entertainment. It is traceable through archeological evidence from prehistoric times to the first examples of written and pictorial documentation in 200 BC. Many contemporary dance forms can be traced back to historical, traditional, ceremonial, and ethnic dances.

Had it not been for the work of the fifteenth century professor of mathematics, Jehan de Tabourot who published a dance manual (Orchesography) using an anagram of his name, many of the earlier forms of European dance might have been lost to us.

Wikipedia:Dance basic topics, List of dance wikibooks, An American Ballroom Companion, Ballroom dance, Wikipedia:WikiProject Dance

Dance - Dance and music

Although dance and music can be traced back to prehistoric times it is unclear which artform came first. However, as rhythm and sound are the result of movement, and music can inspire movement, the relationship between the two forms has always been symbiotic. This relationship serves as the basis for Eurhythmics devised by Emile Jaques-Dalcroze which was influential to the development of Modern dance and modern ballet through artists such as Marie Rambert.

Many early forms of music and dance were created and performed together. This paired development has continued through the ages with dance/music forms such as: Jig, Waltz, Tango, Disco, Salsa, Electronica and Hip-Hop. Some musical genre also have a parallel dance form such as Baroque music and Baroque dance where as others developed separately: Classical music, Classical ballet.

Although dance is often accompanied by music, it can also be presented alone (Postmodern dance) or provide its own accompaniment (tap dance). Dance presented with music may or may not be performed in time to the music depending on the style of dance. Dance performed without music is said to be danced to its own rhythm.

See also: List of dances | Category:Musical genres

Dance - Choreography and notation

Main articles: Choreography, Dance notation

Choreography is the art of making dances and the generic name given to predetermined sequences of dance movement. People who choreograph are called choreographers and may develop their own dance techniques as a part of their choreographic work. Choreography and dance techniques can be written down as dance notation which is analogous to music notation.

The term choreogoraphy has a varied historical context; it is derived from the word chorea. Chorea (χορεία), a Greek Circle dance accompanied by singing, derivatives of chorea are used to describe circle dances in other counties: Khorovod (Russia), Hora (Romania, Moldova, Israel), Horo (Bulgaria). Paracelsus used the term chorea to describe the rapid, jerking physical movements of medieval pilgrims traveling the healing shrine of St. Vitus giving rise to the term St. Vitus' dance. Dance for years has been a gateway for expression and visual entertainment.

Raoul Auger Feuillet and Pierre Beauchamp (who are also said to have developed and recorded the five common feet positions in ballet) reused an adaption of the word chorea to describe dance notation. Feuillet's Chorégraphie (1700) set out a method of dance notation and established the term chorégraphie for the writing, or notating of dances. Thus a person who wrote down dances was a choreographer, but the creator of dances was still known as a dancing master (Le maître à danser) or in later years a ballet master.

Rudolf Laban extended the meaning and use of the word choreographie with his book Choreographie (1926) in which he detailed not only a new form of dance notation but also the principles and theory of a complete system of dance that would later become Laban Movement Analysis (LMA). Rudolf and Joan Benesh coined the term choreology to describe the aesthetic and scientific study of all forms of human movement by movement notation (1955) whilst Laban used the term choreutics to describe LMA.

The rejection of ballet vocabulary and terms by modern dance resulted in the term choreographer replacing Ballet Master and therefore choreography came to mean the art of making dances.

Dance - Dance studies

In the early 1920s dance studies (dance practice, critical theory, analysis and history) began to be considered a serious academic discipline. Today these studies are an integral part of many universities' arts and humanities programs. By the late 20th century the recognition of practical knowledge as equal to academic knowledge lead to the emergence of practice-based research and practice as research. A large range of dance courses are available including:

  • Professional practice: performance and technical skills
  • Practice-based research: choreography and performance
  • Ethnochoreology, encompassing the dance-related aspects of Anthropology, Cultural Studies, Gender Studies, Area studies, Postcolonial theory, Ethnography, etc.
  • Dance and technology: new media and performance technologies.
  • Laban Movement Analysis and Somatic studies
  • Community Dance.
  • Dance-Movement Therapy.

A full range of Academic degrees are available from BA (Hons) to PhD and other postdoctoral fellowships, with many dance scholars taking up their studies as mature students after a professional dance career.

Dance - Categories of dance

Dance can be divided into two main categories that each have several subcategories into which most dance styles can be placed. They are:

  • Concert dance / Performance dance
    • 20th century concert dance
    • Competitive dance
  • Social dance / Participation dance
    • Ceremonial dance
    • Traditional dance

These categories are not mutually exclusive and are context-dependent; a particular dance style may belong to several categories.

See also: List of dance style categories


See also

  • Wikipedia:Dance basic topics
  • List of dance wikibooks
  • An American Ballroom Companion
  • Ballroom dance
  • Wikipedia:WikiProject Dance

Other related archives

1700, 1920s, 1926, 1955, 200 BC, 20th century, 20th century concert dance, Academic degrees, An American Ballroom Companion, Anthropology, Area studies, BA (Hons), Ballroom dance, Baroque dance, Baroque music, Bulgaria, Category:Musical genres, Ceremonial dance, Chorea, Choreography, Circle dance, Classical ballet, Classical music, Competitive dance, Concert dance, Cultural Studies, Dance notation, Dance-Movement Therapy, Disco, Electronica, Emile Jaques-Dalcroze, Ethnography, Eurhythmics, Folk dance, Frankish, Gender Studies, Greek, Hip-Hop, History of dance, Israel, Jig, Laban Movement Analysis, List of dance style categories, List of dance wikibooks, List of dances, Marie Rambert, Martial arts, Modern dance, Moldova, Old French, Orchesography, Paracelsus, Participation dance, Performance dance, PhD, Postcolonial theory, Postmodern dance, Raoul Auger Feuillet, Romania, Rudolf Laban, Rudolf and Joan Benesh, Russia, Salsa, Social dance, Somatic, St. Vitus, St. Vitus' dance, Tango, Traditional dance, Waltz, Wikipedia:Dance basic topics, Wikipedia:WikiProject Dance, academic discipline, aesthetic, analogous, analysis, animals, archeological, artistic, arts, ballet, bee dance, body language, celebrations, ceremonial, ceremony, chorea, choreographers, choreography, critical theory, cultural, dance notation, dancers, entertainment, ethnic, expression, figure skating, genres, gymnastics, historical, history, human, humanities, humans, kata, knowledge, leaves, medieval, modern dance, moral, motion, movement, music, music notation, musical forms, musical genre, new media, non-verbal communication, performance, pilgrims, postdoctoral, practice, prehistoric, prehistoric times, professional, rhythm, rituals, scholars, shrine, social, sound, spiritual, sports, symbiotic, synchronized swimming, tap dance, technologies, traditional, universities, virtuoso, wind



Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Dance", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki

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