在极权主义时代,舞蹈作为变革的媒介

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION Approaching Religion Pub Date : 2022-03-01 DOI:10.30664/ar.111067
L. Hellsten
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇文章指出了两条不同的道路,在这两条道路上,汉娜·阿伦特所描述的健忘症和威利·詹姆斯·詹宁斯所描述的我们历史过去的碎片化扭曲了今天人们对丹宁的看法。我阐述了基督教与殖民大国的纠缠如何影响人们与自己的身体、土地和世界上其他生物建立联系的能力。我描述了西方社会的殖民创伤是如何形成极权主义灌输的孤独和异化的基础的。在这之后,我研究了那些试图在西方基督教传统中找到坚实舞蹈传统的人,当他们试图在错误的地方使传统的存在合法化时,他们往往会陷入一个难题。我展示了在犹太习俗中寻找基督教舞蹈实践的根源是如何经常被超传统主义的理解所纠缠的。这些论点是通过J·卡默隆-卡特关于种族和神学的著作以及文森特·W·劳埃德概述的黑人政治神学来构建的。为西方基督教形式创造舞蹈传统,第二种最常选择的选择是将非西方的“他者”浪漫化。利用林赛·德鲁里的作品,我认为舞者通过将异国舞者带到西方市场,使那些试图拥有“他者”的兴趣得以延续。最后,我描述了第三种选择——在那些批评基督教传统的人中更常见——在二十世纪初蓬勃发展的希腊化和更深奥的教义中寻找转换舞蹈实践的根源。在这条路上,我们遇到了鲁道夫·拉班和伊莎多拉·邓肯等著名舞蹈老师经常被遗忘或忽视的故事。通过结合深奥的身体实践、地球母亲的“精神”和关于种族的优越观点,他们不仅促进了第三帝国如何操纵人民,而且奠定了基础。最后,我分享了民族志故事,讲述了人们对这些过去的历史模式如何影响今天人们对舞蹈的看法的抵制。那些表现出这种抵抗的人并不总是有意识地意识到我所描述的历史根源。然而,参与沉思和治愈舞蹈实践似乎正在创造新的更好的方式来创建社区,并以与创造和我们的创造性相联系的方式生活(Hellsten 2021a)。这些实践的中心主题是抵制完美和控制的幻觉,同时帮助人们倾听和辨别引导他们进入新生活方式的圣灵。
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Dance as an agency of change in an age of totalitarianism
This article identifies two different paths where the amnesia described by Hannah- Arendt and the fragmentation identified by Willie James Jennings of our historical past has distorted how people today view dan-cing. I set out how the Christian entanglement with colonial powers has impacted on people’s abilities to relate to their bodies, lands and other creatures of the world. I describe how the colonial wound of Western society forms the basis of the loneliness and alienation that totalitarianism inculcates. After this, I examine how people who seek to find a solid tradition of dance within the Western traditions of Christianity often end up in a conundrum when they seek to legitimize the existence of the tradition in the wrong places. I show how seeking roots for Christian dance practices in Jewish customs is often entangled in supersessionist understandings. These arguments are constructed by means of both J. Kameron- Carter’s writings on race and theology and the black political theology outlined by Vincent W. Lloyd. The second-most-often chosen option for creating a dance tradition for Western forms of Christianity is to romanticize the non-Western ‘other’. Using Lindsey Drury’s work, I argue that dancers have perpetuated the interests that seek to possess the ‘other’ by bringing exotic dancers to the Western marketplace. Finally, I describe the third option – more commonly found amongst those critical of Christian tradition – to seek the roots of transformational dance practices in Hellenistic and more esoteric teachings flourishing in the early twentieth century. We run into the often forgotten or neglected stories of renowned dance teachers like Rudolf Laban and Isadora Duncan on this path. By combining esoteric bodily practices, Mother Earth ‘spirituality’ and superior views about race, they not only promoted but laid the foundation for how people were manipulated in the Third Reich. I end by sharing ethnographic stories of resistance towards how these past historical patterns have affected how dance is viewed today. Those exhibiting such resistance are not always consciously aware of the historical roots I have described. However, engagement in contemplative and healing dance practices seems to be forging new and better ways to create community and to live in a connected way with creation and our creatureliness (Hellsten 2021a). The central theme of these practices is to resist the illusion of perfection and control while helping people to listen to and discern the Holy Spirit leading them into a new way of living.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
25.00%
发文量
24
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