This article stages a dialogue between Giorgio Agamben’s theory of gesture and the 2016 reconstruction of Merce Cunningham’s 1964 choreography, Winterbranch. This juxtaposition encourages a comparison between Agamben's and Cunningham's respective approaches to the semiotics of dance, the way that dance can generate meaning but also evade meaning in a way that Agamben deems "proper" to the "ethical sphere." For Agamben, dance is composed of what he calls "gestures" that have "nothing to express" other than expressivity itself as a "power" unique to humans who have language. For Cunningham, dance is composed of what he calls "actions," or at other times "facts"—discrete and repeatable movements sketched in the air that reveal the "passion," t...
This essay is a close reading of the “Epistemo-Critical Prologue” of Walter Benjamin’s The Origin of...
This essay—part of a larger project of constructing a new, historically informed philosophy of dance...
This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in p...
This article stages a dialogue between Giorgio Agamben’s theory of gesture and the 2016 reconstructi...
The introduction to this special section of Performance Philosophy takes Giorgio Agamben’s remarks a...
Beginning with Giorgio Agamben’s alignment of ethics and potentiality, this essay questions the ethi...
This chapter, composed of three parts by three different authors, proposes that one of the many poss...
This paper relates the Western Movie to Agamben’s implied gestural zone between intention and act. F...
This essay explores the ethical and gesture in film, developing from Giorgio Agamben’s two ideas of ...
Dance, as a mode of physical interaction, offers opportunities to care and be cared for, but this do...
This part-performance, part-presentation was given as a contribution to the closed colloquium 'Exten...
As an anthropologist and dancer, I ask how gesture emerges within a dance production process. The re...
Focusing on Giorgio Agamben’s early writings (The Man without Content, Stanzas, Infancy and History)...
Editorial Article to the special issue "Mise en geste. Studies of Gesture in Cinema" (ed. by Ana Hed...
In the The Man Without Content (1999) Giorgio Agamben problematises the traditional distinction betw...
This essay is a close reading of the “Epistemo-Critical Prologue” of Walter Benjamin’s The Origin of...
This essay—part of a larger project of constructing a new, historically informed philosophy of dance...
This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in p...
This article stages a dialogue between Giorgio Agamben’s theory of gesture and the 2016 reconstructi...
The introduction to this special section of Performance Philosophy takes Giorgio Agamben’s remarks a...
Beginning with Giorgio Agamben’s alignment of ethics and potentiality, this essay questions the ethi...
This chapter, composed of three parts by three different authors, proposes that one of the many poss...
This paper relates the Western Movie to Agamben’s implied gestural zone between intention and act. F...
This essay explores the ethical and gesture in film, developing from Giorgio Agamben’s two ideas of ...
Dance, as a mode of physical interaction, offers opportunities to care and be cared for, but this do...
This part-performance, part-presentation was given as a contribution to the closed colloquium 'Exten...
As an anthropologist and dancer, I ask how gesture emerges within a dance production process. The re...
Focusing on Giorgio Agamben’s early writings (The Man without Content, Stanzas, Infancy and History)...
Editorial Article to the special issue "Mise en geste. Studies of Gesture in Cinema" (ed. by Ana Hed...
In the The Man Without Content (1999) Giorgio Agamben problematises the traditional distinction betw...
This essay is a close reading of the “Epistemo-Critical Prologue” of Walter Benjamin’s The Origin of...
This essay—part of a larger project of constructing a new, historically informed philosophy of dance...
This paper discusses some of the means through which non-representational imagery in dance, and in p...