Resistance and Support - Albright, Ann Cooper; (ed.) - Prospero Internet Bookshop

Resistance and Support: Contact Improvisation @ 50
 
Product details:

ISBN13:9780197776278
ISBN10:0197776272
Binding:Paperback
No. of pages:378 pages
Size:244x178x25 mm
Weight:658 g
Language:English
Illustrations: 18
700
Category:

Resistance and Support

Contact Improvisation @ 50
 
Publisher: OUP USA
Date of Publication:
 
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Short description:

Resistance and Support: Contact Improvisation @ 50 is a ground-breaking anthology that collects twenty original writings that elucidate critically important somatic and political perspectives on Contact Improvisation (CI). This form of partner dancing that was started in the United States in 1972, has spread into a vibrant global community in the twenty-first century. Resistance and Support is edited and includes an introduction by veteran CI practitioner and dance studies scholar Ann Cooper Albright.

Long description:
Resistance and Support: Contact Improvisation @ 50 is a ground-breaking anthology that collects twenty original writings that elucidate critically important somatic and political perspectives on Contact Improvisation (CI). This form of partner dancing that was started in the United States in 1972, has spread into a vibrant global community in the twenty-first century. Resistance and Support is edited and includes an introduction by veteran CI practitioner and dance studies scholar Ann Cooper Albright.

For much of its existence in the twentieth century, Contact Improvisation prided itself on its democratic and egalitarian roots. Jams are open to newcomers, women learned to lift men, and dancing roles were not conventionally gendered in the traditional sense of partnered dancing such as tango or ballroom. These conventions meant that questions of social power were often ignored within the jams and festivals where Contact Improvisation thrives. This thoughtful collection engages issues of inclusion and access through insightful essays written by people whose life experiences are shaped by this extraordinary form of kinaesthetic communication.

Chapters trace the stories of CI in China and Taiwan, India, Mexico, Brazil, as well as those in the U.S., Canada, and Europe. Some discuss the somatic training that provides a movement basis for the improvisational exchanges between dancers. Others foreground the feminist and queer perspectives on the evolving twenty-first century practice of the form. Several elaborate on the healing, spiritual, or therapeutic aspects of CI, while others explore the mixed ability approaches to the form popularized by Alito Alessi's Dance Ability pedagogy. Like Critical Mass: CI @ 50, the international conference and festival honoring CI's 50th anniversary from which these writings emerged, these essays both celebrate the expansive possibilities and critique some of the exclusionary conventions of this ever-evolving form of communal dance.

Like the diversity of contact improvisation communities in the world, the authors here present their differing experiences, opinions, analysis and research, offering opportunities to laugh, cry, argue, sigh, and recall that the ongoing human, magical and mycelium-like dance practice of contact improvisation, constantly re-invented and changed by the cultures of people who practice it, is alive and well.
Table of Contents:
Introduction, Ann Cooper Albright
Productive Tensions
Introduction by Ann Cooper Albright
1) "Mindfully Rocking and Rolling: Contact Improvisation as a Feminist Practice in the Turbulent 'Seventies" by Dena Davida
2) "Getting There from Here: A Roadmap to Safer Brave Open Jams" by Michele Beaulieux
3) "Gender, Power, and Equity in Contact Improvisation" by Kristin Horrigan
4) "Not: Not Contact Improvisation" by Joy Mariama Smith, edited by Asimina Chremos
5) "Doing it wrong. Contact's counter counter-cultures" by Emma Bigé and Paul Singh
6) "Tracing the Natural Body for More Inclusive and Equitable CI Futures" by Robin Raven Prichard
7) "Underscoring Nancy Stark Smith's legacy: definitions and disruptions" by Sarah Young
Responsive Touch
Introduction by Ann Cooper Albright
8) "The Small Dances of Listening" by Lesley Greco
9) "Listening Touch" by Rosalind Holgate Smith
10) "Therapeutic Applications of Contact Improvisation" by Aaron Brando and Gabrielle Revlock
11) "XCI: Intimacy in Contact Improvisation" by Aramo Olaya
12) "Rolling and Knowing: Reflections on the Endurance of the CI Event" by Brian Schultis
13) "Something we touch or that touches us - a newcomer locating themselves in Contact" by Lisa Claire Greene
14) "The Religious Function of Contact Improvisation" by Carol Laursen
Local Communities/Global Contexts
Introduction by Ann Cooper Albright
15) "Resistance and Horizons: EPIICO, Community and Self-Organization" by Ariadna Franco Martínez, Esmeralda Padilla García, Elisa Romero Morato, Mariana Torres Juárez and Laura Villeda Aguirre, translated by Caroline Tracey
16) "Making Contact: Practicing and creating spaces of Contact Improvisation in India" by Guru Suraj and Adrianna Michalska
17) "Contact Improvisation in China and Taiwan" roundtable discussion with Ming-Shen Ku, Shuyi (Candy) Liao, Xiao Zhang, Huichao (Dew) Ge; introduction by Ge; transcription and translation by Yuting (Elsie) Wang
18) "Deviant Bodies: improvising survival in Brazil" by Ana Carolina Bezerra Teixeira
19) "Queering Contact Improvisation with Sara Ahmed (and the wheelchair)" by M? Paz Brozas Polo
20) "Intensive Curiosity: A Dialogue about Teaching CI" by Joe Dumit and Dorte Bjerre Jensen
Index