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Danser la maladie, contaminer la beauté: a viral approach to the (choreo)graphed body

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Mendeley Data2024-01-31 更新2024-06-29 收录
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https://digitallibrary.usc.edu/asset-management/2A3BF16DADAD
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This work brings together three different disciplines (literature, medicine, and dance) across three periods (the nineteenth, twentieth, and twenty‐first centuries) in order to investigate the figure of the dancer as the emblem of a new aesthetic in both nineteenth‐century literature (Emile Zola, Théophile Gautier and Charles de Boigne) and contemporary dance (Maurice Béjart, Alain Buffard, Bill T. Jones and Thomas Lebrun). As argued here, the figure of the sickly but visually spectacular dancer troubles modern medical ideals of bodily perfection and challenges the exclusion of disgust (dégoût) from the realm of taste (goût). First, this dissertation explores the “naturalist dancer” as an emblem of the fin de siècle literary tradition that reunites its fascination with the visual beauty of the female body and its preoccupation with the invisibility of disease. The naturalist novel, as demonstrated through an analysis of nineteenth‐century dance criticism read through Zola’s Nana, takes up dance and its bodies in order to work out the prevailing tensions between medicine and art, or more specifically, diseased bodies and the image of beauty they may nonetheless transmit. ❧ Tragically, at the end of the twentieth century, the dance world was once again ravaged by another viral epidemic: AIDS. In this case, the male rather than the female dancer became the body at risk. Even though AIDS eventually devastates both dancers’ and non-dancers’ bodies, performers, at least in the early stages of the disease, can remain without physical marks of illness. Unlike Nana and other naturalist dancers, who met their (fictional) demise in terrifyingly ugly ways, male dancers at the end of twentieth century came to embody the fantasy of a younger generation that was sick or dying while still remaining beautiful. Here again, this dissertation contends that dance becomes the scene for grappling with the relationship between aesthetic production and pathology, even as the dancing body is politicized through activism and social movements. The final chapter turns to contemporary representations of illness on stage in order to investigate the creation of a post‐AIDS aesthetic. The analysis focuses on one particular contemporary ballet, Three Decades of Fenced‐in Love (2013), choreographed by Thomas Lebrun, here read through the lens of post‐AIDS literature. In this context, the analysis points out the shift from physical symptoms to a psychical, “emotional immunodeficiency.” In our reading of Lebrun’s work, we interrogate the double stigma illustrated in Three Decades of Fenced‐in Love: a physical mark that punctures the skin, and a symbolic trace that reckons with the generation’s trauma and as such, comes to redefine the “health” of twenty‐first‐century bodies. Ultimately, this work identifies in dance—and the performing arts associated with it—the dancer’s positive viral effect that, like a parasite, penetrates not just the realms of literature and performance, but the core of modern society.
创建时间:
2024-01-31
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