scholarly journals Dancing labour: Practising a personal archive

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 22-27
Author(s):  
Katrín Gunnarsdóttir
Keyword(s):  

Abstract This article presents and discusses solo dance practices developed by Katrín Gunnarsdóttir during the years 2014–2020. She started to develop her practices with the solo work Saving History (2014), a chronological charting of her relationship with borrowing movement. As a consequence of that process she became interested in exploring the virtuosity of slowly morphing one movement into another, and that research developed into another solo work, Shades of History (2016). The act of warming up and getting ready for a performance formed the basis of the third solo, Dancing (to) (2020). Through this series of solo performances, Katrín has realized her ongoing interest in dancing labour, performing the archive and a focus on the dancing rather than the dancer.

2003 ◽  
Vol 7 (2) ◽  
pp. 219-240 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mario Baroni

Form in classical music is fundamentally a question of organising musical time in order to facilitate a listening corresponding to author's expectations. In the past this was obtained by coordinating different parameters towards a single goal. In twentieth century music, the more detached relationship between the composer and the listener meant that less importance was given to the idea of “correct” listening and to the coordination of parameters. This article is devoted to one of the extreme points in this process: A quartet by Bruno Maderna composed in 1956 under the influence of the ideologies of Darmstadt. The quartet was examined by three different groups of analysts. The first group examined the score of the quartet, while the third group only had a recorded performance at its disposal; the second group analyzed both the score and the performance. The three groups had to describe the form of the piece in terms of three hierarchical levels: Its microform {i.e. the organisation of minimal units not divisible into smaller parts); its macroform (i.e. its division into the minimum possible number of parts); the medium form {i.e. a collection of minimal units that could also be interpreted as an acceptable division of the parts at a macroformal level). Two basic criteria were used: Segmentation (local parametric discontinuity between two adjacent parts) and similarity (coherence between the parameters within each part). The results of the three analyses were somewhat diverse, thus demonstrating the tendency to relax the sense of form in such a quartet, as well as the presence of different procedures used when listening to a performance and analysing a score.


Tempo ◽  
1953 ◽  
pp. 19-20
Author(s):  
Donald Mitchell

One of the brightest of the Third Programme's recent efforts was the presentation of a little festival of Pfitzner's music. “Little,” perhaps, may be not quite the right word for however short a series of programmes which included the whole of Palestrina (1912–1915), but it must be remembered that Pfitzner wrote four other operas besides this celebrated chef-d'oeuvre—Der arme Heinrich (1891–93), Die Rose vom Liebesgarten (1897–1900), Das Christelflein (1906, revised 1917), and Das Herz (1930–31). The B.B.C. gave us no glimpse of these other operas, although round about Christmas of each year one of their regional orchestras undertakes the overture to Das Christelflein as an appropriately seasonal piece. For this festival occasion, the B.B.C, in addition to Palestrina, threw in a song recital and a performance of Pfitzner's last chamber work, the Sextet (Op. 55/1945) for piano, violin, viola, cello, double-bass and clarinet. These two latter items may have been well-intentioned choices, but, notwithstanding, they were extremely ill chosen. The Third Programme—as, alas, so often—was either wrongly advised, or simply did not have any (skilled) advice to call upon. For instance, the six songs, ably performed by Mary Jarred, belonged to Pfitzner's earliest period—the latest “Lied”" was Sonst (Op. 15, no. 4), composed in 1904, and most of the other songs were written in the 1880's or 90's. But Pfitzner's output of “Lieder” extends to the 1930's and up to Op. 41—and his maturest and best songs are to be found in the years which the B.B.C. did not remotely approach! Incidentally, no opus numbers were printed in the Radio Times or announced over the air, so that as far as the uninformed listener was concerned he was hearing a “representative” selection of Pfitzner's “Lieder”; in fact, of course, he was hearing nothing of the kind.


Author(s):  
Melvin A. Eisenberg
Keyword(s):  

Chapter 25 concerns the role of restitution in contract law. There are three basic types of case in which a contract-law plaintiff is awarded restitutionary damages. In the first type, the defendant has breached the contract but the plaintiff elects to recover restitutionary damages rather than expectation or reliance damages because restitutionary damages are higher. In the second type, the plaintiff has breached a contract after rendering partial performance, the defendant has not paid the plaintiff for the benefit conferred by his performance because the plaintiff has breached, and the plaintiff requests restitutionary damages for that benefit. In the third type the plaintiff rendered a performance pursuant to a contract that is unenforceable on some ground, and therefore is unable to bring a claim on the contract. Accordingly, the plaintiff requests restitutionary damages.


2012 ◽  
Vol 15 (4) ◽  
pp. 381-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kevin E. McHugh ◽  
Ann M. Fletchall

We present a performance in festival laughter that unfolds in three movements. Movement I traces the emergence and proliferation of Renaissance “faires” in America as spectacle, a Rabelaisian landscape of pleasure and excess that speaks to nostalgia and escape as cultural elixirs. In Movement II, we sketch the history of festival and wink to Ren Fest as contemporary expression of the carnivalesque, sanitized remnants of transgression and subversion that marked premodern carnivals and festivals. This catapults us to the third, and culminating, movement—an eruption in festival laughter that reverberates and shakes high-minded seriousness, leaving in its wake questions of being qua becoming. Our entanglement in laughter moves in streams of anti- or nonrepresentational thought, most notably that of Georges Bataille. Laughter is spontaneous, a contagion that “communicates” that we beings called human are thoroughly relational, most united in “senseless” detachment. We end the performance with a coda, sounding eruptions of laughter as moments of the unexpected, moments of vitality, moments of communitas ripe with possibility.


Author(s):  
Charles Saliba

Amidst major industry changes and challenges, and with the third generation joining the business, a family-owned shipping and transport conglomerate in Lebanon became aware of the need to transform its operating and organization models to survive. This conviction paved the way for a global organizational change and development initiative in collaboration with HR Works, a performance creation consulting firm based in Beirut since 2008.


2021 ◽  
Vol 51 (2) ◽  
pp. 360-374
Author(s):  
Stan Erraught

The notion of soundless music seems contradictory, even absurd: the concept of soundless musical experience less so. In this article, I explore two quite different descriptions of this kind of experience as set out in two mid-twentieth-century Irish novels. In one, Flann O'Brien's The Third Policeman, the narrator watches one of the titular sergeants enjoy music that he – the narrator – cannot hear. In the second, Ralph Cusack's Cadenza, the narrator watches as a village priest mimes playing the piano on a café table, a performance he ‘hears’ and appreciates. Speculatively combining and extending these episodes, and using the figures of the philistine and the aesthete in Adorno's Aesthetic Theory as a key, I suggest that an anxiety about music and musical expression characterized the newly independent Ireland, an anxiety linked to wider concerns often read as ‘postcolonial’.


1982 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 75-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
Axel J. Halbach

Author(s):  
Charles E. Jordan ◽  
Stanley J. Clark

<p class="MsoNormal" style="text-align: justify; margin: 0in 0.5in 0pt;"><span style="font-size: x-small;"><span style="font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;,&quot;serif&quot;; letter-spacing: -0.15pt;">SFAS No. 130 allows three format choices for reporting </span><span style="font-family: &quot;Times New Roman&quot;,&quot;serif&quot;;">comprehensive income (CI); two involve reporting CI in a performance-based financial statement, while the third option incorporates it into a statement of changes in stockholders' equity (SCSE).<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>Prior research suggests that reporting CI in the latter option results in less useful information for investors.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>This study examines CI reporting for a sample of financial service firms and demonstrates that a majority (63%) of them chose a SCSE format.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span>In addition, a significant association existed between both the direction and size of the components of other comprehensive income and the format chosen.<span style="mso-spacerun: yes;">&nbsp; </span></span></span></p>


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