International Conference (Biennale de la danse, CNSMD & ENS de Lyon)
10-12 Jun 2021 Lyon (France)

Call for Papers [archived]

French version

The call for papers has ended.

How is history moved, reconfigured, stimulated, by current research on dance? In connection with the forthcoming publication of A History of Dance in the West (Ed. Seuil, Sept. 2020), this international conference aims to extend questions addressed by scholars’ contributions to the book, as well as generate entirely new dialogues via various acts of “decentering” dance historical scholarship. The polysemic notion of decentering is here understood as an invitation to reevaluate theoretical models, methods, approaches and historiographies of dance (see specific themes proposed below).

One idea for a choreographic inspiration for the decentering process are Alwin Nikolais’s 1970 experiments and development of a “travelling center”. For Nikolais, decentering the dancing body provided emancipation and an opening up of the body’s expressive forces, especially in relation to a heritage of codified, hierarchical methods of organizing the body in dance training. Just as Nikolais experimented with a multiplicity of impulses and a polyfocality in space and time, this trans-period conference Towards a Decentered History of Dance hopes to valorize and initiate new ways for researchers to modulate their viewpoints (geographically, through time periods, aesthetics, genres, ethics as well as in relation to both artists and audiences of dance) concerning the history of embodied movement, that is to say, both theatrical as well as social dance practices.

Decentering is thus understood as an intellectual process of deconstruction, in which “moving the center” is a means to decolonize and reorient research perspectives, theoretical notions and methods by which dance practices and cultures have historically been legitimized or ignored (“center vs. periphery”, “capital vs. province”, “noble/savant vs. common/popular”, “occidental vs. oriental”, “high art” or theatrical dance vs. “folklore” or “ethnic dance”). Decentering the dance historian’s perspective is a theoretical and methodological gesture requiring an effort of reflexivity and a certain willingness to take risks. This is particularly pertinent where deconstructing hierarchies, reconceptualizing categories, reinventing and redefining sources and methods is concerned. Our intention is to generate a safe space for new knowledge and scholarship emerging from a decentered state of potential off-balance. Conceptualizing how people from different regions of the world relate to and have related to one another in the past via dancing and via movement experiences like Nikolais’s “travelling center” will hopefully allow new research in dance history to resonate with the various intellectual and corporeal imperatives to “move the center” that have been challenging a variety of fields in the social sciences and humanities.

We propose the following (non-exhaustive) possibilities for themed proposals:

  1. Decentering source material for dance history
  2. Decentering spaces, places and geographies of dance
  3. Decentering the gaze
  4. Decentering the œuvre in dance
  5. Decentering gender in dance
  6. Decentering corporeal expressions of emotion

This international conference, Towards a Decentered History of Dance, organized with the support of the Lyon Dance Biennale, the National Center for Dance (CND), the National Superior Conservatory for Dance and Music (CNSMD) of Lyon, and the École Normale Supérieure (ENS) of Lyon, is open to all dance researchers and seeks particularly to encourage the submission of proposals by emerging scholars and doctoral students.

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