论文标题
闯入点:躯体叙事:颞社区转变中艺术与科学的融合
Break-in' Point: Somatic narratives: The convergence of arts and science in the transformation of temporal communities
论文作者
论文摘要
2012年的艺术与科学表演与社区参与研究计划的闯入'Point在春季和秋季学期在英国利兹的利兹大学的春季学期发表。舞蹈艺术家A3与理论物理学家A2之间合作的结果,在绩效研究人员A1的指导下,闯入点是基于艺术与科学交集的一系列现实生活中的相遇 - 探索力量,风险,风险,暴露和弹性。突破性的表现提供了对身体,心理和/或情感力量在压力下的关键点的审讯 - 导致结构性退化以及超出范围的经验。本文是对性能的研究,审查和分析它是一个想象中的躯体区域 - 超越时间界限,引人注目的和点燃新的可能性的相遇,使表演者和观众的精神和认识论转变参与。本文介绍了闯入点的三个主要时期:(1)发展期 - 脚本建设和排练,(2)表演 - 表演者和观众之间的实时相遇以及(3)超越剧院 - 教室和教学法中的数字交易。该文章贡献了有关科学教育的新概念和新的思考方式,数字技术在教育学,舞蹈/戏剧公共参与和社区艺术实践中的作用,作为康复,健康和韧性的实践。
Break-in' Point, a 2012 arts and science performance and community engagement research initiative, was presented in the spring and fall semesters at the University of Leeds in the United Kingdom at Stage@Leeds. The outcome of a collaboration between dance artist A3 and theoretical physicist A2, under the direction of performance researcher A1, Break-in' Point is based on a series of real-life encounters at intersections of arts and science - exploring force, risk, exposure and resilience. The Break-in' Point performance offered an interrogation of the critical point at which physical, mental, and/or emotional strength give way under stress - causing structural degeneration and the experience of what lies beyond. This article is an examination of the performance, reviewing and analysing it as an imagined somatic zone - embodied encounters that transcend temporal bound-ness, compelling and igniting new possibilities - that engaged spiritual and epistemological transformation of performers and audiences. The article addresses three main periods in the life of Break-in' Point: (1) the development period - script building and rehearsals, (2) the performance - live encounters between and among performers and audiences and (3) beyond the theatre - digital engagements in the classroom and pedagogy. The article contributes new concepts and new ways of thinking about science education, the role of digital technology in pedagogy, dance/theatre public engagement and community arts practices as practices of healing, health and resilience.