The ancient dancer in the modern world: responses to greek and roman dance

The ancient dancer in the modern world: responses to greek and roman dance

Macintosh, Fiona

164,56 €(IVA inc.)

The first systematic study of the impact of ideas about ancient Greek and Roman dance on modern theatrical and choreographic practices. With contributions from experts in a range of fields, the volume presents a wide conspectus on anunder-explored but central aspect of classical reception, dance and theatre history, and the history of ideas. INDICE: Fiona Macintosh: Introduction; I. Dance and the Ancient Sources; 1: Ismene Lada-Richards: Dead but not Extinct: On Reinventing Pantomime Dancing in Eighteenth-Century England and France; 2: Frederick Naerebout: 'In Search of a Dead Rat': The Reception of Ancient Greek Dance in Late Nineteenth-Century Europe and America; 3: Ann Cooper-Albright: The Tanagra Effect: Wrapping the Modern Body in the Folds of Ancient Greece; 4: Tyler Jo Smith: Reception or Deception? Approaching Dance through Vase-Painting; 5: Kathleen Riley: A Pylades for the twentieth century: Fred Astaire and the Aesthetic of Bodily Eloquence; II. Dance and Decadence; 6: Ruth Webb: 'Where there is Dance there is the Devil': Ancient and Modern Representations of Salome; 7: Edith Hall: 'Heroesof the Dance Floor': The Missing Exemplary Male Dancer in the Ancient Sources; 8: Jennifer Thorp: Servile Bodies? The Status of the Professional Dancer in the Late Seventeenth and Early Eighteenth Centuries; 9: Fiona Macintosh: Dancing Maenads in Early Twentieth-Century Britain; III. Dance and Myth; 10: Barbara Ravelhofer: Ancient Greece, Dance and the English Masque; 11: Pantelis Michelakis: Dancing with Prometheus: Performance and Spectacle in the 1920s; 12: Alessandra Zanobi: From Duncan to Bausch with Iphigenia; 13: Henrietta Bannerman: Ancient Myths and Modern Moves: The Greek-Inspired Dance Theatre of Martha Graham; 14: Nadine Meisner: Iphigenia, Orpheus and Eurydice in the Human Narrative of Pina Bausch; IV. Ancient Dance and the Modern Mind; 15: Daniel Albright: Knowing the Dancer, Knowing the Dance: The Dancer as Décor; 16: Sue Jones: Modernism and Dance: Apollonian or Dionysian?; 17: Vanda Zajko: Dance, Psychoanalysis and Modernist Aesthetics: Martha Graham's 'Night Journey'; 18: ArabellaStanger: Striking a Balance: The Apolline and Dionysiac in Post-Classical Choreography; 19: Richard Cave: Caryl Churchill and Ian Spink 'allowing the past to speak directly to the present'; V. The Ancient Chorus in Contemporary Performance; 20: Yana Zarifi: Staniewski's Secret Alphabet of Gestures: Dance, Bodyand Metaphysics; 21: Struan Leslie: Gesamtkunstwerk: Modern Moves and the Ancient Chorus; 22: Suzy Willson & Helen Eastman: Red Ladies : Who are they and what do they want?

  • ISBN: 978-0-19-954810-1
  • Editorial: Oxford University
  • Encuadernacion: Cartoné
  • Páginas: 536
  • Fecha Publicación: 02/09/2010
  • Nº Volúmenes: 1
  • Idioma: Inglés