Anonymer Tanz als dekolonialisierende Praxis. Ein embodied Research Versuch

10/03/2021
by   Paula Helm, et al.
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This paper addresses the question of how and with what consequences anonymity is used as a creative element in experiments dealing with alternative forms of knowledge production. More specifically, the focus is on a particular current in contemporary dance, experimental dance. This has developed in the course of the 1970s. Its guiding idea is to shift the focus away from finished choreography and performance to the processuality, spontaneity, and experience of dance practice itself. Dance is seen as a laboratory in which to experiment with gravity, body boundaries, group dynamics and perception. The focus is on testing, touching, trying. The corresponding events are called either 'Dance Labs' or 'Movement Research Workshops', depending on the regularity. An instrument that is often used in the context of such events to create specific social situations and group dynamics or to channel perceptions in certain directions is anonymity. Anonymity is broadly understood as the capping of connections that results in a degree of unaccountability with respect to various aspects of a person, situation, or activity. For example, unaccountability can arise from the fact that people can no longer see each other, so that visual identification becomes impossible, even if only temporarily. By breaking familiar modes of identification, other forms of relating can sometimes be emphasized. This is what makes this form of anonymity so interesting for experimental dance.

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