
Wesley Lim
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Papers by Wesley Lim
develop audience emotion through an alternative narrative of Tonya Harding. However, scenes perpetually undermine the developed trust through contradictory testimony and the figure of Tonya calling the viewer her “attacker.” The film I, Tonya aggressively deals with larger social and political implications regarding domestic violence in lower socioeconomic households in the US, uncritical media consumption, and capitalist structures.
and choreography from television broadcasts of her competitive and show performances
between 1963 and 1970. My analysis shows that she aesthetically adhered to
prescriptions of SED ideology by following GDR dance styles, incorporating ballet and
folk- dance steps and exuding an embodied “Sovietness,” thus cultivating a large fan base
in the GDR and the Soviet Union. Th is success brought more interest to fi gure skating and
strengthened the image of East German skating against the capitalist West. Aft er 1969 her
performances began expressing Western features due to the infl uences of her continued
exposure to international travel, her Eislauf- Familie (ice- skating family), and access to
Western media, all of which allowed her to explore her own Eigensinn (personal agency).
I argue that her career carved out an alternative form of East German resistance while
working within the confi nes of the GDR.
2000)1—choreographed by Sasha Waltz and filmed by Jörg Jeshel and Brigitte
Kramer. While Waltz’s piece Dialoge 99, choreographed with the kinesthetic
experience of Berlin’s Jewish Museum, played a large role in shaping Körper’s
aesthetic, the filmmakers draw stylistically from juxtaposing color and black and
white shots as well as the theme of piles from Night and Fog (Alain Resnais,
1955)2 in the screendance. Körper occupies a dichotomous aesthetic—by engaging
with concentration camp-like treatment of human bodies and paradoxically
highlighting consensual experimentation with bodily materiality and building on
somatic practices.
the awestruck Wim Wenders decided to make a film with the
choreographer featuring her dances. After Bausch’s untimely
death in 2009, however, Wenders dedicated the film Pina to her.
I argue that their comparable aesthetics—focusing on the image
instead of a narrative—allow him to experiment with the filming
of dance. Wenders still consciously references Bausch’s Tanztheater
form but also enhances the viewer’s experience by using various
filmic techniques not easily possible on stage: first, Wenders
invokes a dancefilm lens using such techniques as gesture dance
and what I am calling voiceover vignettes. Second, he edits earlier
footage of Bausch and company into his own filming using match
cuts to allow the specter of Bausch to dance again with her
ensemble. These aesthetic methods, therefore, widen the scope
with which he and other filmmakers can conceptualize of the
dancing body in filmic space.
und Aufführungen des frühen modernen Tanzes um 1900 ihn dazu inspirierten,
seine Erfahrungen schriftlich zu dokumentieren. Auf Grund dieser Veranstaltungen
entwickelte er eine ästhetische Sicht, die er mit den Schriften Friedrich Nietzsches
und Henri de Régniers und deren Bestreben, die Welt ästhetisch neu
wahrzunehmen, verband. Dieser Aufsatz untersucht, wie die experimentellen Tänze
Loïe Fullers,Ruth St. Denis’und der Ballets Russes den Grafen mit vorher nie gesehenen
Tanzbewegungen konfrontierten, die die Entwicklung einer eigenen Tanzästhetik anregten.
Zentrale Elemente dieser Tanzästhetik sind Intellektualisierung, aber auch Erotisierung
des Tanzkörpers.Weiterhin ermöglichten es diese Entwicklungen Kessler, das
Ballet Josephslegende zu konzipieren und so die Beobachterperspektive mit der Perspektive
des Tanzschaffenden zu vertauschen.
develop audience emotion through an alternative narrative of Tonya Harding. However, scenes perpetually undermine the developed trust through contradictory testimony and the figure of Tonya calling the viewer her “attacker.” The film I, Tonya aggressively deals with larger social and political implications regarding domestic violence in lower socioeconomic households in the US, uncritical media consumption, and capitalist structures.
and choreography from television broadcasts of her competitive and show performances
between 1963 and 1970. My analysis shows that she aesthetically adhered to
prescriptions of SED ideology by following GDR dance styles, incorporating ballet and
folk- dance steps and exuding an embodied “Sovietness,” thus cultivating a large fan base
in the GDR and the Soviet Union. Th is success brought more interest to fi gure skating and
strengthened the image of East German skating against the capitalist West. Aft er 1969 her
performances began expressing Western features due to the infl uences of her continued
exposure to international travel, her Eislauf- Familie (ice- skating family), and access to
Western media, all of which allowed her to explore her own Eigensinn (personal agency).
I argue that her career carved out an alternative form of East German resistance while
working within the confi nes of the GDR.
2000)1—choreographed by Sasha Waltz and filmed by Jörg Jeshel and Brigitte
Kramer. While Waltz’s piece Dialoge 99, choreographed with the kinesthetic
experience of Berlin’s Jewish Museum, played a large role in shaping Körper’s
aesthetic, the filmmakers draw stylistically from juxtaposing color and black and
white shots as well as the theme of piles from Night and Fog (Alain Resnais,
1955)2 in the screendance. Körper occupies a dichotomous aesthetic—by engaging
with concentration camp-like treatment of human bodies and paradoxically
highlighting consensual experimentation with bodily materiality and building on
somatic practices.
the awestruck Wim Wenders decided to make a film with the
choreographer featuring her dances. After Bausch’s untimely
death in 2009, however, Wenders dedicated the film Pina to her.
I argue that their comparable aesthetics—focusing on the image
instead of a narrative—allow him to experiment with the filming
of dance. Wenders still consciously references Bausch’s Tanztheater
form but also enhances the viewer’s experience by using various
filmic techniques not easily possible on stage: first, Wenders
invokes a dancefilm lens using such techniques as gesture dance
and what I am calling voiceover vignettes. Second, he edits earlier
footage of Bausch and company into his own filming using match
cuts to allow the specter of Bausch to dance again with her
ensemble. These aesthetic methods, therefore, widen the scope
with which he and other filmmakers can conceptualize of the
dancing body in filmic space.
und Aufführungen des frühen modernen Tanzes um 1900 ihn dazu inspirierten,
seine Erfahrungen schriftlich zu dokumentieren. Auf Grund dieser Veranstaltungen
entwickelte er eine ästhetische Sicht, die er mit den Schriften Friedrich Nietzsches
und Henri de Régniers und deren Bestreben, die Welt ästhetisch neu
wahrzunehmen, verband. Dieser Aufsatz untersucht, wie die experimentellen Tänze
Loïe Fullers,Ruth St. Denis’und der Ballets Russes den Grafen mit vorher nie gesehenen
Tanzbewegungen konfrontierten, die die Entwicklung einer eigenen Tanzästhetik anregten.
Zentrale Elemente dieser Tanzästhetik sind Intellektualisierung, aber auch Erotisierung
des Tanzkörpers.Weiterhin ermöglichten es diese Entwicklungen Kessler, das
Ballet Josephslegende zu konzipieren und so die Beobachterperspektive mit der Perspektive
des Tanzschaffenden zu vertauschen.
Dancer and choreographer Gertrud Bodenwieser fled Austria in 1938, arriving in Australia in the following year. She brought European modern dance to her new homeland and established her own modernist movement form, which drew influence from her intersectional identities as a Jewish, Austrian, and Australian woman.
Drawing on cultural, literary, dance, performance, and queer studies, Dancing with the Modernist City analyzes an array of material from 1896 to 1914—essays, novels, short stories, poetry, newspaper articles, photographs, posters, drawings, and early film. It argues that these writers and artists created a genre called the metropolitan dance text, which depicts dancing figures not on a traditional stage, but with the streets, advertising pillars, theaters, cafes, squares, and hospitals of an urban setting. Breaking away from the historically male, heteronormative view, this posthumanist mode of writing highlights the visual and episodic unexpectedness of urban encounters. These literary depictions question traditional conceptualizations of space and performance by making the protagonist and the reader feel like they embody the dancer and the movement. In doing so, they upset conventional depictions of performance and urban spaces in ways paralleling modern dance.