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A study of the relationship of Isadora Duncan to the musical composers and mentors who influenced her musical selections for choreographyPruett, Diane Milhan. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis--University of Wisconsin--Madison. / Typescript. Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 292-309).
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Isadora Duncan et Gordon Craig /Splatt, Cynthia. January 1984 (has links)
Mémoire de Maîtrise d'études théâtrales--Paris III, 1984. / Bibliogr. p. XIV-XXIII, vol. 2.
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Essential characteristics of dance artistry as taken from the writings of Isadora Duncan, Martha Graham, and Doris Humphrey /Wild, Maureen F. January 1981 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--University of Wisconsin--Madison, 1981. / Typescript. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Includes bibliographical references (leaf 119).
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Ne rien inventer en art : paradoxes autour de la danse d'Isadora Duncan / Inventing nothing in art : paradoxes about Isadora Duncan's dancingSchwartz-Rémy, Elisabeth 15 December 2014 (has links)
Cette thèse, sous la direction de Claude Jamain, interroge l’affirmation de Duncan selon laquelle elle n’invente pas sa danse qu’elle qualifie de naturelle. Afin de répondre à ce paradoxe, l’idée est de saisir l’élaboration de sa danse comme matière en termes kinesthésiques, moteurs et qualitatifs, en interactions avec les contextes historiques et culturels auxquels elle se confronte en Amérique, en Europe et à la charnière des XIXe et XXe siècles. Après une présentation des pratiques corporelles en Amérique, la thèse aborde la façon dont l’imaginaire de la nature en Amérique et les différentes visions de l’antique aux Etats-Unis d’Amérique et en Europe participent de l’élaboration de sa danse. La conclusion,loin d’apporter une réponse radicale, tendrait à considérer sa danse à la fois comme renaissance de l’antique et naissance d’une nouvelle danse. / This thesis, directed by Professor Claude Jamain, questions Duncan’s assertion that she does not invent her dance, which she describes as natural, even though, it is immediately praised for its novelty. In order to deal with this paradox, this research seeks to capture the way she developed her dance as a discipline with its kinesthetic, motor and qualitative aspects,against the historical and cultural contexts she encountered in America and Europe at theturn of the 19th and 20th centuries. After a presentation of bodily-practices in the United States, the thesis shows how the imaginary view of nature in America and the differing visions of antiquity in the United States and in Europe feed the development of her dance.Our conclusion, far from offering a radical answer, would rather consider her dance as are birth of the antique, as well as a new emerging dance.
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Neue alte Weiblichkeit Frauenbilder und Kunstkonzepte im Freien Tanz: Loïe Fuller, Isadora Duncan und Ruth St. Denis zwischen 1891 und 1934Meinzenbach, Sandra January 2009 (has links)
Zugl.: Leipzig, Univ., Diss., 2009
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Finding LightJones, Olivia 01 December 2020 (has links) (PDF)
Throughout history, dance is a powerful tool for expression of self or community. Art, especially dance, became a way to react to societal shifts and stalemates through means of storytelling. Through my choreography, I used history of modern dance such as the mother of modern dance, Isadora Duncan, an incredibly influential choreographer, Martha Graham, and her famous protege, Merce Cunningham. I used a combination of their methodology to choreograph my intrapersonal journey with dance and life.
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THE RE-BIRTH OF DANCE THROUGH THE SOUL OF TRAGEDY: ON NIETZSCHE'S BIRTH OF TRAGEDY BECOMING BODY IN THE TEXT AND DANCE OF ISADORA DUNCANBerger-Di Donato, Andrea January 2009 (has links)
In her autobiography, Isadora Duncan recalled an assertion made by Karl Federn: "Only by Nietzsche, he said, will you come to the full revelation of dancing expression as you seek it" (Duncan 1995, 104). Duncan also told her students to read Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy, as if it was their "Bible" (Duncan 1928, 108). These statements justify an examination of Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy as an imperative source for understanding the depth of her dance philosophy. This dissertation asks what it means to see Duncan's philosophy of dance and its practice in the context of this nineteenth-century German philosopher. It examines Nietzsche's words and ideas about the birth of tragedy and how they become body in the writings and dance of Isadora Duncan. This dissertation focuses on the philosophical idea of the "tragic idea" according to Nietzsche's and Duncan's interpretations and applications of philosophy bodied forth in dance. This tragic idea comes from an emerging idea in intellectual history initiated by followers of Kant. The idea of drawing from Greek tragedy a philosophy that could be used in philosophical thought to debate the meaning and function of art and even life was particular to German thinkers, philosophers and literati. While it drew from Greek tragic plays a philosophy, German thought on tragedy differed from the ancients in that it was applied as a philosophy for life. The ideas on Greek tragedy that Nietzsche situates his own within were developed within and against the Romantic aesthetic. The characteristics of Romantics provide context for understanding the use of tragedy as a source for thought and art. Although Nietzsche came to oppose aspects of Romanticism, his first book was in part a dialogue with German Romantic thought and aesthetics. Nietzsche's idea of tragic philosophy in his The Birth of Tragedy is examined in precedence to Duncan's use of his book. This dissertation provides an historical contextualization of the idea of a tragic philosophy to show that Duncan's choice to base her dance philosophy on Nietzsche's tragic philosophy follows this historical philosophical thread. As Nietzsche both dedicated The Birth of Tragedy to Wagner and based the book on Wagner's interpretation of Greek tragedy (Williamson 2004, 238), and Duncan wrote on and danced to Wagner, Wagner is relevant within the specific context of understanding Duncan's dance as a philosophical practice of The Birth of Tragedy. This dissertation, then, looks into Duncan's writings as a way to read Nietzsche's The Birth of Tragedy, and through these texts to interpret some aspects alive within the Romantic mood. In addition, this dissertation incorporates as part of both the literature and the analysis of Duncan's moving image, an embodied voice of personal experience from its writer, who has practiced this dance intimately. I weave my personal experience into the dissertation, using my experience in dancing within this dance form to reflect on the ideas presented here. The tragic idea as I see it within this movement drives the dancer's ideas about dance as an expressive art form. A tragic philosophy/wisdom motivates the imagination, the range of emotional expression and the physical body as it shapes and moves itself in, through and around space. A tragic sensibility represents a quality of investigation about the range of human experience that happens in and from out of the body. It comes from deep within the body's inner space and emotional and physical aliveness. It is an idea that the dancer is conscious of and actively engaged in as a process of dancing (for oneself) and making dance (as performative). / Dance
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La danza libre para el teatro : una aproximación a la construcción extracotidiana del cuerpo durante el entrenamiento corporalCarpena Tafur, Andrea Natalia 24 September 2018 (has links)
Los principios de la danza libre, desarrollados por Isadora Duncan a
inicios del siglo XX, tales como la observación de la naturaleza, la belleza
y la forma, y el ritmo proponen un acercamiento personal al movimiento
libre del cuerpo y al retorno de las formas naturales físicas que el ser
humano dejó de utilizar producto de la búsqueda de un esteticismo en las
danzas clásicas como el ballet durante los siglos anteriores. Estas danzas
se caracterizaban por ser rígidas y cumplir patrones de movimiento
inalterables que deformaban el cuerpo. Por ende, la investigación se
propone recuperar la libertad de movimiento que propuso Duncan en su
danza libre adaptándola al teatro y aplicándola al entrenamiento físico del
actor en nuestro contexto actual con el fin de redescubrir y ampliar sus
posibilidades físicas comunicacionales en escena. Así mismo propone
desarrollar una conciencia plena del cuerpo, su uso y la relación con el
otro en el espacio. El objetivo principal radica en validar que enfoque de
trabajo de los principios adaptados funciona como medio para la
construcción de códigos corporales extracotidianos que como
consecuencia permiten adquirir mayor libertad creadora en escena. Por
ende, el proceso del laboratorio intenta probar que el cuerpo posee gran
capacidad comunicativa y expresiva que se encuentra dormida o poco
desarrollada, pero que puede ser incrementada entrenando con los
principios adaptados de la danza libre. / Tesis
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Being IsadoraClarke, Suzanna January 2003 (has links)
Being Isadora is a story of possession. Isadora Duncan, the founder of modern dance, was an intensely creative, free-spirited woman. Her life experiences early last century were as fascinating and tragic as her achievements.
In New York in 1985, Isadora's last surviving pupil and adopted daughter, ninety-year old Anna Duncan, is searching for a way to fulfill a long held promise. Isadora wished to control the way she was remembered and had made Anna promise that any remaining film of her dancing would be destroyed. But one film survives and Anna is running out of time to find it.
A young Australian journalist, Tamsin Doyle, attends a dance class at the Isadora Duncan Studio and meets Anna, unknowingly becoming part of the quest.
Initially the stories of Isadora and Tamsin run parallel, then as Tamsin gets to know Anna, she becomes immersed in a dream world of dramatic incidents from Isadora's life. The dreams become waking experiences and she fears her will is gradually being taken over. She ends up in places - in fact other countries - that she had no intention of being, pursuing an agenda that is not her own.
In the second part of the book, she finds herself in Russia, where Isadora lived after the Revolution. She meets and falls in love with Vladimir, the grandson of Isadora's former dance collaborator. Unable to prevent herself being possessed while visiting the school Isadora founded, Tamsin is arrested by the authorities. A Russian KGB officer has his own plans and abducts her, keeping her prisoner in a dacha outside Moscow. He shows her a film of herself dancing and then the surviving film of Isadora. The two are almost identical and a dramatic climax ensues.
Themes in the book explore the nature of memory and how it is influenced by photographic and filmic record, love and loss and the way patterns repeat in people's lives in an attempt to change outcomes.
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Study in Rain and Light: An approach for audiovisual compositionMacDonald, James Donald, III 21 June 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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