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Dance research

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Dance research is the study of dance, including dance history, ethnochoreology, dance theory, dance anthropology, and dance science. Dance science is the scientific study of dance and dancers, as well as the practical application of scientific principles to dance. Its aims are the enhancement of performance, the reduction of injury, and the improvement of well-being and health.

History

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Dance research as an academic discipline is relatively new. In 1967, the first volume of the CORD Dance Research Annual wrote: "One of the most serious problems in dance research is found in the fact that the literati in the field are not yet the university people".[1] Research methodologies in Dance can include descriptive research, qualitative research, survey research, correlational research, case studies, within-subject experiments, between group experiments, systematic reviews, and epidemiology research.[2] In addition to research concerned with technical or aesthetic aspects of dance, research in the field of dance also often includes connections to scholarly disciplines that place dance in context, including social and literary history, philosophy, anthropology, and medical science.[3]

Sport science

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Dance science is the scientific study of dance and dancers, as well as the practical application of scientific principles to dance, similar to sports science. Its aims are the enhancement of performance, the reduction of injury, and the improvement of well-being and health. While the dance sciences span a wide range of domains within which researchers and practitioners have a variety of backgrounds, a unifying interest of those studying and practicing dance science is promoting health, well-being, and optimum performance in dancers.[4]

Typically, the subject areas within dance science are similar to those studied in "sports science", though naturally with a focus on dance and the special considerations that this involves. They include: physiology, anatomy, kinesiology, psychology, biomechanics, nutrition, and similar. However, unlike sports science, dance science sometimes also studies related topics such as creativity and somatic techniques, including the practices of Pilates, yoga, Alexander technique, Feldenkrais method, etc.

Dance medicine

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Dance medicine and science as a field of study developed in the 1970s and '80s out of the field of sports medicine. In the early 1980s, the American Dance Festival (ADF) started including dance medicine courses in their coursework for dancers. When ADF moved to Duke University, physicians from Duke University Hospital became interested in dancers. In 1990, the International Association for Dance Medicine and Science (IADMS) was formed by an international group of dance medicine practitioners, dance educators, dance scientists, and dancers. Membership of IADMS began with 48 members in 1991, and has grown to over 900 members in 35 countries as of 2016.[5]It produces a scientific peer-reviewed journal, Journal of Dance Medicine and Science,[6] and holds an annual conference. The Performing Arts Medicine Association (PAMA), which holds its annual symposium in Aspen-Snowmass, Colorado, is an organization that concerns itself with the injuries and health issues of musicians as well as dancers.

Organizations

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References

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  1. ^ "CORD dance research annual". Committee on Research in Dance. 1967. Retrieved 2010-06-27.
  2. ^ Welsh, Tom; Ambegaonkar, Jatin P.; Mainwaring, Lynda (2023). Research Methods in the Dance Sciences. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida. pp. 12–13. ISBN 9780813069548.
  3. ^ Editorial Board (Spring 1983). "Editorial Note". Dance Research: The Journal of the Society for Dance Research. 1 (1): 2. JSTOR 1290794.
  4. ^ Welsh, Tom; Amebegaonkar, Jatin P.; Mainwaring, Lynda (2023). Research Methods in the Dance Sciences. Gainesville, FL: University Press of Florida. p. 3. ISBN 9780813069548.
  5. ^ International Association for Dance Medicine & Science. "About IADMS". iadms.org. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  6. ^ Journal of Dance Medicine & Science

Further reading

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  • Braun, Lesley Nicole. 2014. "Trading Virtue for Virtuosity: The Artistry of Kinshasa's Concert Danseuses." African Arts 47(4): 48-57.Castaldi, Francesca. 2006. Choreographies of African Identities: Negritude, Dance, and the National Ballet of Senegal. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press.
  • Cohen, Adrienne. 2016. "Inalienable Performances, Mutable Heirlooms: Dance, Cultural Inheritance, and Political Transformation in the Republic of Guinea." American Ethnologist 43(4): 650-662.
  • Daniel, Yvonne. 1995. Rumba: Dance and Social Change in Contemporary Cuba. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.Foster, Susan Leigh. 1996. Corporealities: Dancing Knowledge Culture and Power. Edited by Susan Leigh Foster. London: Routledge.
  • Dunham, Katherine. 1969. Island possessed. University of Chicago Press.
  • Franko, Mark. "Dance and the political: States of exception." Dance Research Journal (2006): 3-18.
  • Ross, Janice. 2015. Like a Bomb Going Off: Leonid Yakobson and Ballet as Resistance in Soviet Russia. Yale University Press.
  • Schauert, Paul. 2015. Staging Ghana: Artistry and Nationalism in State Dance Ensembles. Indiana University Press.
  • Wilcox, Emily. 2018. Revolutionary Bodies: Chinese Dance and the Socialist Legacy. University of California Press.
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