Thinking Motion in Dance

On A-Human Mimetic Potential

Autor/innen

  • Melanie Hirner

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21248/thewis.6.2017.131

Abstract

Following on from this confrontation with the question of how it might be possible to actually grasp the dancing body’s specific mode of thinking, the search for an understanding that might add another quality to analyses like this could lead beyond the term of proprioception that Caspersen refers to. Maybe this search could depart from another term that is more likely to be familiar from the context of theater than specific to the field of dance: mimesis.

Literaturhinweise

Benjamin, Walter: “On the Mimetic Faculty”, in: W.B.: Selected Writings. Vol. 2: 1931-1934. Ed. by Michael W. Jennings/Howard Eiland/Gary Smith, transl. by Rodney Livingstone et al. Cambridge/London 1999, pp. 720-722.

Caspersen, Dana: “The Body is Thinking”. https://walkerart.org/magazine/the-body-is-thinking-the-body-is-thinking-by-dana-caspersen#_blank from March 9, 2007.

Gil, José/Lepecki, André: “Paradoxical Body”, in: TDR: The Drama Review 50:4 (2006), pp. 21-35.

Leigh-Foster, Susan: Choreographing Empathy. Kinesthesia in Performance. Abingdon 2011, pp. 10-11.

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Veröffentlicht

2026-05-20

Zitationsvorschlag

Hirner, M. (2026). Thinking Motion in Dance: On A-Human Mimetic Potential. Thewis, 6(1), 144–150. https://doi.org/10.21248/thewis.6.2017.131

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