1st Edition

Choreographing Discourses A Mark Franko Reader

By Mark Franko, Alessandra Nicifero Copyright 2019
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    Choreographing Discourses brings together essays originally published by Mark Franko between 1996 and the contemporary moment. Assembling these essays from international, sometimes untranslated sources and curating their relationship to a rapidly changing field, this Reader offers an important resource in the dynamic scholarly fields of Dance and Performance Studies.

    What makes this volume especially appropriate for undergraduate and graduate teaching is its critical focus on twentieth- and twenty-first-century dance artists and choreographers – among these, Oskar Schlemmer, Merce Cunningham, Kazuo Ohno, William Forsythe, Bill T. Jones, and Pina Bausch, some of the most high-profile European, American, and Japanese artists of the past century. The volume’s constellation of topics delves into controversies that are essential turning points in the field (notably, Still/Here and Paris is Burning), which illuminate the spine of the field while interlinking dance scholarship with performance theory, film, visual, and public art.

    The volume contains the first critical assessments of Franko’s contribution to the field by André Lepecki and Gay Morris, and an interview incorporating a biographical dimension to the development of Franko’s work and its relation to his dance and choreography. Ultimately, this Reader encourages a wide scope of conversation and engagement, opening up core questions in ethics, embodiment, and performativity.

    Foreword

    Randy Martin

    Preface

    Mark Franko

    Introduction

    1. Gay Morris, Re-conceptualizing Time, Historical Time, and the Time of Interpretation
    2. André Lepecki, Theory’s moves

    Chapters

    1. Writing for the Body: Notation, Reconstruction, and Reinvention in Dance

    2. History/Theory -- Criticism/Practice

    3. From Croce’s Critical Condition to the Choreographic Public Sphere

    4. Splintered Encounters: The Critical Reception of William Forsythe in the United States, 1979-1989

    5. Archeological Choreographic Practices: Foucault and Forsythe

    6. Figurae: Re-translating the Encounter between Peter Welz, William Forsythe and Francis Bacon

    7. Dance and Figurability

    8. Can We Inhabit a Dance? Reflections on Dancing the "Bauhaus Dances" in Dessau

    9. The Readymade as Movement: Cunningham, Duchamp, and Nam June Paik’s Two Merces

    10. Dance as Sign and Unruly Corporeality in Pasolini’s Film and Theory

    11. The Dancing Gaze Across Cultures: Kazuo Ohno’s Admiring La Argentina

    12. Bausch and The Symptom

    13. The Quarrel of the Queen and the Transvestite: Sexuality, Class and Subculture in Paris is Burning

    14. Dance, the De-materialization of Labor, and the Productivity of the Corporeal

    15. In the Company of Donya Feuer: an Interdisciplinary Method

    16. In Conversation: Alessandra Nicifero with Mark Franko

    Bibliography

    Publications

    Performance History

    Choreography, Performance

    Index

    Biography

    Mark Franko is Laura H. Carnell Professor of Dance at Boyer College of Music and Dance, Temple University (Philadelphia). Founding editor of the Oxford Studies in Dance Theory book series, Franko is currently a Guggenheim Fellow, writing a book on French neoclassical ballet.

    Alessandra Nicifero is a dance writer and translator based in New York City. Her major interests focus on movement analysis, social choreography, the spatial organization of memories, and archiving dance material. Currently, she is studying at the New York Graduate School of Psychoanalysis.