Ciane Fernandes
The Moving Researcher
Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis in Performing Arts Education and Creative Arts Therapies
Ciane Fernandes
The Moving Researcher
Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis in Performing Arts Education and Creative Arts Therapies
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The Moving Researcher offers a complete approach to Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis, detailing the original method, exploring recent developments and examining its applications. With contributions from internationally renowned professionals at key institutions, this book covers all concepts taught as part of the Certificate of Movement Analysis.
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The Moving Researcher offers a complete approach to Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis, detailing the original method, exploring recent developments and examining its applications. With contributions from internationally renowned professionals at key institutions, this book covers all concepts taught as part of the Certificate of Movement Analysis.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 191mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 620g
- ISBN-13: 9781849055871
- ISBN-10: 1849055874
- Artikelnr.: 41419993
- Verlag: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
- Seitenzahl: 312
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 254mm x 191mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 620g
- ISBN-13: 9781849055871
- ISBN-10: 1849055874
- Artikelnr.: 41419993
Ciane Fernandes is tenured professor at the School of Theater and the Performing Arts Graduate program at Federal University of Bahia (PPGAC/UFBA), Salvador, Brazil. She is an associate researcher at the Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies (LIMS), New York. She has a Ph.D. in art and humanities for performing artists from New York University, a certificate of movement analysis from LIMS and a post-doctorate degree in Contemporary Culture and Communications from UFBA. For the last twenty years Ciane has worked with Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Authentic Movement in education, research and performance. She has taught and performed based on these methods internationally, and presented lecture demonstrations and photo/video exhibitions. Ciane lives in Lençóis BA, Brazil. For more information, go to www.cianefernandes.pro.br or www.ppgac.tea.ufba.br.
Foreword. Regina Miranda. Preface to the English edition. 1. The
Development of Rudolf Von Laban's Movement Theories. 1.1 The process of
movement: An expanded outline of the application of Laban theory to
movement. Jackie Hand, Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies, USA.
1.2. Voicing the practice: Laban's embodied immigration to Brazil. Melina
Scialom. 1.3. Choreology and Choreological Studies. Júlio Mota, Pontifical
Catholic University of Paraná. 1.4 How to move things and words: Laban's
Moving Analysis as Somatic-Performative Research. 1.5. Autistic or
Artistic? Laban's theories applied to child disability as somatic
performative integration. 2. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis:
Interartistic Practice, Creativity, and Dynamic Writing. 2.1. Dance theater
and Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis. 2.2. Infinite dance: Dynamic bodies
and concepts. 2.3. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Labanotation.
2.4. The 'Mastery of Movement': The categories of Body-Effort-Shape-Space.
2.5. The dialogue among the arts in total body expression. 3. Among Rocks,
Reptiles and Connective Wind Currents: The Body. 3.1. Bartenieff
Principles. 3.1.1. Breath Support and Kinetic Chains. 3.1.2. Core Support.
3.1.3. Dynamic Alignment. 3.1.4. Body Organizations and Developmental
Movement Patterns. 3.1.5. Bony Connections. 3.1.6. Weight Shift for
Locomotion. 3.1.7. Initiation and Sequencing. 3.1.8. Gradated Rotation.
3.1.9. Effort Life for Body Connectivity. 3.1.10. Spatial Intent. 3.2.
Bartenieff Fundamentals. 3.2.1. Preparatory Exercises. 3.2.2. The Basic
Six. 3.3. Posture/Gesture Merger. 3.4. Gesture and Posture according to
Laban and Lamb. Júlio Mota. 3.4.1. The Legacy of Rudolf von Laban. 3.5.
Other Concepts and Symbols of Body. 3.5.1. Body Parts. 3.5.2. Upper and
Lower Limbs. 3.5.3. Bodily Actions. 4. Effort or Eukinetics: Pitches and
Colors of a Poetic Body. 4.1. The Flow Factor. 4.1.1. Free flow. 4.1.2.
Bound flow. 4.2. The space factor. 4.2.1. Indirect space. 4.2.2. Direct
space. 4.3. The weight factor. 4.3.1. Light weight. 4.3.2. Strong weight.
4.4. The time factor. 4.2.1. Sustained time. 4.2.2. Quick time. 4.5. The
Effort Factors and Quaternary Correspondences. 4.6. Pre-Effort. 4.6.1.
Space Pre-Effort. 4.6.2. Weight Pre-Effort. 4.6.3. Time Pre-Effort. 4.7.
The Combination of Factors. 4.7.1. Effort States. 4.7.2. Effort Drives.
4.8. Effort Phrases and Phrasing. 4.8.1. Effort Phrases. 4.8.2. Effort
Phrasing. 5. Putting the Body Relationships in Shape. 5.1. Shape Flow.
5.1.1. Growing/opening/unfolding. 5.1.2. Shrinking/closing/folding. 5.1.3.
Growing and Shrinking Alternately. 5.2. Spoke-Like and Arc-Like
Directional. 5.3. Shaping. 5.4. Specific Shapes Created by the Body. 5.5.
Relationships. 6. The Architecture of Moving Spaces. 6.1. Space Harmony.
Susanne Schlicher, Professor/Dramaturg, Theaterakademie Hamburg/Hochschule
für Musik und Theater (Hamburg University of Music and Theatre. 6.1.1.
Space Harmony and Bartenieff Fundamentals. 6.2. Kinesphere. 6.3. Reach
Space. 6.3.1. Small Kinesphere- Near Reach. 6.3.2. Medium Kinesphere- Mid
Reach. 6.3.3. Large Kinesphere- Far Reach. 6.4. Crosses of Axes. 6.4.1.
Standard Cross of Axes. 6.4.2. Body Cross of Axes. 6.4.3. Constant Cross of
Axes. 6.5. Crystalline Forms. 6.5.1. The Tetrahedron. 6.5.2. The Octahedron
and its Three Dimensions. 6.5.3. The Cube and its Four Diagonals. 6.5.4.
The Icosahedron and its Three Planes. 6.5.5. The Dodecahedron and its Three
Planes. 6.6. Spatial Pathway. 6.6.1. Central Pathway. 6.6.2. Transverse
Pathway. 6.6.3. Peripheral Pathway. 6.7. Spatial Tension. 6.7.1. Central
Tension. 6.7.2. Transverse Tension. 6.7.3. Peripheral Tension. 6.8. Other
concepts and symbols of Space. 7. Associating Body-Effort-Shape-Space. 7.1.
Choreutics: Tuning and turning compositions. 7.1.1. Affinities in the
Octahedron Dimensions. 7.1.2. Affinities in the Cube Diagonals. 7.1.3.
Affinities in the Isocahedron Planes. 7.1.4. From points in Space to
movement composition: The Personal Scale. 7.1.5. From Shape Flow to
movement composition: Authentic Movement. 7.2. Body Attitude. 7.2.1. Body.
7.2.2. Effort Stress. 7.2.3. Shape Stress. 7.2.4. Space Stress. 7.3. Themes
of Continuous Dynamics and Change. 7.3.1. Inner/Outer. 7.3.2.
Exertion/Recuperation. 7.3.3. Function/Expression. 7.3.4.
Mobility/Stability. 8. Mapping Bodily Histories: Drawing the Moving
Body-Text. 8.1. The observation of human movement for description. 8.2. The
description of human movement. 8.2.1. The Effort-Shape Horizontal Motif.
8.2.2. The Discursive Description and the Vertical Motif Description.
8.2.3. The Detailed Description. 8.3. Simplified Movement Analysis. 8.3.1.
LMA Simplified Coding Sheet. 8.3.2. Filling Out the Simplified Coding
Sheet- An Example. 8.3.3. Applying the Simplified Coding Sheet to dance
movement analysis: Bahian urban environment and daily life in the moves of
'Hidden Agenda' by Tran Chan Dance Company. 8.4. Detailed Movement
Analysis. 8.4.1. LMA Detailed Coding Sheet. 8.4.2. Filling out the Detailed
Coding Sheet- An Example. 8.4.3. Applying the Detailed Coding Sheet to
character movement analysis: Carmen Maura in the Pedro Almodóvar's film
'Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.' Ciane Fernandes. Susanne
Schlicher. Rosel Grassmann, Artist and Director at Wilderness BodyPainting,
Independent Concept and Photo Artist of Movement Studies. Works Cited.
Development of Rudolf Von Laban's Movement Theories. 1.1 The process of
movement: An expanded outline of the application of Laban theory to
movement. Jackie Hand, Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies, USA.
1.2. Voicing the practice: Laban's embodied immigration to Brazil. Melina
Scialom. 1.3. Choreology and Choreological Studies. Júlio Mota, Pontifical
Catholic University of Paraná. 1.4 How to move things and words: Laban's
Moving Analysis as Somatic-Performative Research. 1.5. Autistic or
Artistic? Laban's theories applied to child disability as somatic
performative integration. 2. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis:
Interartistic Practice, Creativity, and Dynamic Writing. 2.1. Dance theater
and Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis. 2.2. Infinite dance: Dynamic bodies
and concepts. 2.3. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Labanotation.
2.4. The 'Mastery of Movement': The categories of Body-Effort-Shape-Space.
2.5. The dialogue among the arts in total body expression. 3. Among Rocks,
Reptiles and Connective Wind Currents: The Body. 3.1. Bartenieff
Principles. 3.1.1. Breath Support and Kinetic Chains. 3.1.2. Core Support.
3.1.3. Dynamic Alignment. 3.1.4. Body Organizations and Developmental
Movement Patterns. 3.1.5. Bony Connections. 3.1.6. Weight Shift for
Locomotion. 3.1.7. Initiation and Sequencing. 3.1.8. Gradated Rotation.
3.1.9. Effort Life for Body Connectivity. 3.1.10. Spatial Intent. 3.2.
Bartenieff Fundamentals. 3.2.1. Preparatory Exercises. 3.2.2. The Basic
Six. 3.3. Posture/Gesture Merger. 3.4. Gesture and Posture according to
Laban and Lamb. Júlio Mota. 3.4.1. The Legacy of Rudolf von Laban. 3.5.
Other Concepts and Symbols of Body. 3.5.1. Body Parts. 3.5.2. Upper and
Lower Limbs. 3.5.3. Bodily Actions. 4. Effort or Eukinetics: Pitches and
Colors of a Poetic Body. 4.1. The Flow Factor. 4.1.1. Free flow. 4.1.2.
Bound flow. 4.2. The space factor. 4.2.1. Indirect space. 4.2.2. Direct
space. 4.3. The weight factor. 4.3.1. Light weight. 4.3.2. Strong weight.
4.4. The time factor. 4.2.1. Sustained time. 4.2.2. Quick time. 4.5. The
Effort Factors and Quaternary Correspondences. 4.6. Pre-Effort. 4.6.1.
Space Pre-Effort. 4.6.2. Weight Pre-Effort. 4.6.3. Time Pre-Effort. 4.7.
The Combination of Factors. 4.7.1. Effort States. 4.7.2. Effort Drives.
4.8. Effort Phrases and Phrasing. 4.8.1. Effort Phrases. 4.8.2. Effort
Phrasing. 5. Putting the Body Relationships in Shape. 5.1. Shape Flow.
5.1.1. Growing/opening/unfolding. 5.1.2. Shrinking/closing/folding. 5.1.3.
Growing and Shrinking Alternately. 5.2. Spoke-Like and Arc-Like
Directional. 5.3. Shaping. 5.4. Specific Shapes Created by the Body. 5.5.
Relationships. 6. The Architecture of Moving Spaces. 6.1. Space Harmony.
Susanne Schlicher, Professor/Dramaturg, Theaterakademie Hamburg/Hochschule
für Musik und Theater (Hamburg University of Music and Theatre. 6.1.1.
Space Harmony and Bartenieff Fundamentals. 6.2. Kinesphere. 6.3. Reach
Space. 6.3.1. Small Kinesphere- Near Reach. 6.3.2. Medium Kinesphere- Mid
Reach. 6.3.3. Large Kinesphere- Far Reach. 6.4. Crosses of Axes. 6.4.1.
Standard Cross of Axes. 6.4.2. Body Cross of Axes. 6.4.3. Constant Cross of
Axes. 6.5. Crystalline Forms. 6.5.1. The Tetrahedron. 6.5.2. The Octahedron
and its Three Dimensions. 6.5.3. The Cube and its Four Diagonals. 6.5.4.
The Icosahedron and its Three Planes. 6.5.5. The Dodecahedron and its Three
Planes. 6.6. Spatial Pathway. 6.6.1. Central Pathway. 6.6.2. Transverse
Pathway. 6.6.3. Peripheral Pathway. 6.7. Spatial Tension. 6.7.1. Central
Tension. 6.7.2. Transverse Tension. 6.7.3. Peripheral Tension. 6.8. Other
concepts and symbols of Space. 7. Associating Body-Effort-Shape-Space. 7.1.
Choreutics: Tuning and turning compositions. 7.1.1. Affinities in the
Octahedron Dimensions. 7.1.2. Affinities in the Cube Diagonals. 7.1.3.
Affinities in the Isocahedron Planes. 7.1.4. From points in Space to
movement composition: The Personal Scale. 7.1.5. From Shape Flow to
movement composition: Authentic Movement. 7.2. Body Attitude. 7.2.1. Body.
7.2.2. Effort Stress. 7.2.3. Shape Stress. 7.2.4. Space Stress. 7.3. Themes
of Continuous Dynamics and Change. 7.3.1. Inner/Outer. 7.3.2.
Exertion/Recuperation. 7.3.3. Function/Expression. 7.3.4.
Mobility/Stability. 8. Mapping Bodily Histories: Drawing the Moving
Body-Text. 8.1. The observation of human movement for description. 8.2. The
description of human movement. 8.2.1. The Effort-Shape Horizontal Motif.
8.2.2. The Discursive Description and the Vertical Motif Description.
8.2.3. The Detailed Description. 8.3. Simplified Movement Analysis. 8.3.1.
LMA Simplified Coding Sheet. 8.3.2. Filling Out the Simplified Coding
Sheet- An Example. 8.3.3. Applying the Simplified Coding Sheet to dance
movement analysis: Bahian urban environment and daily life in the moves of
'Hidden Agenda' by Tran Chan Dance Company. 8.4. Detailed Movement
Analysis. 8.4.1. LMA Detailed Coding Sheet. 8.4.2. Filling out the Detailed
Coding Sheet- An Example. 8.4.3. Applying the Detailed Coding Sheet to
character movement analysis: Carmen Maura in the Pedro Almodóvar's film
'Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.' Ciane Fernandes. Susanne
Schlicher. Rosel Grassmann, Artist and Director at Wilderness BodyPainting,
Independent Concept and Photo Artist of Movement Studies. Works Cited.
Foreword. Regina Miranda. Preface to the English edition. 1. The
Development of Rudolf Von Laban's Movement Theories. 1.1 The process of
movement: An expanded outline of the application of Laban theory to
movement. Jackie Hand, Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies, USA.
1.2. Voicing the practice: Laban's embodied immigration to Brazil. Melina
Scialom. 1.3. Choreology and Choreological Studies. Júlio Mota, Pontifical
Catholic University of Paraná. 1.4 How to move things and words: Laban's
Moving Analysis as Somatic-Performative Research. 1.5. Autistic or
Artistic? Laban's theories applied to child disability as somatic
performative integration. 2. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis:
Interartistic Practice, Creativity, and Dynamic Writing. 2.1. Dance theater
and Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis. 2.2. Infinite dance: Dynamic bodies
and concepts. 2.3. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Labanotation.
2.4. The 'Mastery of Movement': The categories of Body-Effort-Shape-Space.
2.5. The dialogue among the arts in total body expression. 3. Among Rocks,
Reptiles and Connective Wind Currents: The Body. 3.1. Bartenieff
Principles. 3.1.1. Breath Support and Kinetic Chains. 3.1.2. Core Support.
3.1.3. Dynamic Alignment. 3.1.4. Body Organizations and Developmental
Movement Patterns. 3.1.5. Bony Connections. 3.1.6. Weight Shift for
Locomotion. 3.1.7. Initiation and Sequencing. 3.1.8. Gradated Rotation.
3.1.9. Effort Life for Body Connectivity. 3.1.10. Spatial Intent. 3.2.
Bartenieff Fundamentals. 3.2.1. Preparatory Exercises. 3.2.2. The Basic
Six. 3.3. Posture/Gesture Merger. 3.4. Gesture and Posture according to
Laban and Lamb. Júlio Mota. 3.4.1. The Legacy of Rudolf von Laban. 3.5.
Other Concepts and Symbols of Body. 3.5.1. Body Parts. 3.5.2. Upper and
Lower Limbs. 3.5.3. Bodily Actions. 4. Effort or Eukinetics: Pitches and
Colors of a Poetic Body. 4.1. The Flow Factor. 4.1.1. Free flow. 4.1.2.
Bound flow. 4.2. The space factor. 4.2.1. Indirect space. 4.2.2. Direct
space. 4.3. The weight factor. 4.3.1. Light weight. 4.3.2. Strong weight.
4.4. The time factor. 4.2.1. Sustained time. 4.2.2. Quick time. 4.5. The
Effort Factors and Quaternary Correspondences. 4.6. Pre-Effort. 4.6.1.
Space Pre-Effort. 4.6.2. Weight Pre-Effort. 4.6.3. Time Pre-Effort. 4.7.
The Combination of Factors. 4.7.1. Effort States. 4.7.2. Effort Drives.
4.8. Effort Phrases and Phrasing. 4.8.1. Effort Phrases. 4.8.2. Effort
Phrasing. 5. Putting the Body Relationships in Shape. 5.1. Shape Flow.
5.1.1. Growing/opening/unfolding. 5.1.2. Shrinking/closing/folding. 5.1.3.
Growing and Shrinking Alternately. 5.2. Spoke-Like and Arc-Like
Directional. 5.3. Shaping. 5.4. Specific Shapes Created by the Body. 5.5.
Relationships. 6. The Architecture of Moving Spaces. 6.1. Space Harmony.
Susanne Schlicher, Professor/Dramaturg, Theaterakademie Hamburg/Hochschule
für Musik und Theater (Hamburg University of Music and Theatre. 6.1.1.
Space Harmony and Bartenieff Fundamentals. 6.2. Kinesphere. 6.3. Reach
Space. 6.3.1. Small Kinesphere- Near Reach. 6.3.2. Medium Kinesphere- Mid
Reach. 6.3.3. Large Kinesphere- Far Reach. 6.4. Crosses of Axes. 6.4.1.
Standard Cross of Axes. 6.4.2. Body Cross of Axes. 6.4.3. Constant Cross of
Axes. 6.5. Crystalline Forms. 6.5.1. The Tetrahedron. 6.5.2. The Octahedron
and its Three Dimensions. 6.5.3. The Cube and its Four Diagonals. 6.5.4.
The Icosahedron and its Three Planes. 6.5.5. The Dodecahedron and its Three
Planes. 6.6. Spatial Pathway. 6.6.1. Central Pathway. 6.6.2. Transverse
Pathway. 6.6.3. Peripheral Pathway. 6.7. Spatial Tension. 6.7.1. Central
Tension. 6.7.2. Transverse Tension. 6.7.3. Peripheral Tension. 6.8. Other
concepts and symbols of Space. 7. Associating Body-Effort-Shape-Space. 7.1.
Choreutics: Tuning and turning compositions. 7.1.1. Affinities in the
Octahedron Dimensions. 7.1.2. Affinities in the Cube Diagonals. 7.1.3.
Affinities in the Isocahedron Planes. 7.1.4. From points in Space to
movement composition: The Personal Scale. 7.1.5. From Shape Flow to
movement composition: Authentic Movement. 7.2. Body Attitude. 7.2.1. Body.
7.2.2. Effort Stress. 7.2.3. Shape Stress. 7.2.4. Space Stress. 7.3. Themes
of Continuous Dynamics and Change. 7.3.1. Inner/Outer. 7.3.2.
Exertion/Recuperation. 7.3.3. Function/Expression. 7.3.4.
Mobility/Stability. 8. Mapping Bodily Histories: Drawing the Moving
Body-Text. 8.1. The observation of human movement for description. 8.2. The
description of human movement. 8.2.1. The Effort-Shape Horizontal Motif.
8.2.2. The Discursive Description and the Vertical Motif Description.
8.2.3. The Detailed Description. 8.3. Simplified Movement Analysis. 8.3.1.
LMA Simplified Coding Sheet. 8.3.2. Filling Out the Simplified Coding
Sheet- An Example. 8.3.3. Applying the Simplified Coding Sheet to dance
movement analysis: Bahian urban environment and daily life in the moves of
'Hidden Agenda' by Tran Chan Dance Company. 8.4. Detailed Movement
Analysis. 8.4.1. LMA Detailed Coding Sheet. 8.4.2. Filling out the Detailed
Coding Sheet- An Example. 8.4.3. Applying the Detailed Coding Sheet to
character movement analysis: Carmen Maura in the Pedro Almodóvar's film
'Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.' Ciane Fernandes. Susanne
Schlicher. Rosel Grassmann, Artist and Director at Wilderness BodyPainting,
Independent Concept and Photo Artist of Movement Studies. Works Cited.
Development of Rudolf Von Laban's Movement Theories. 1.1 The process of
movement: An expanded outline of the application of Laban theory to
movement. Jackie Hand, Laban/Bartenieff Institute of Movement Studies, USA.
1.2. Voicing the practice: Laban's embodied immigration to Brazil. Melina
Scialom. 1.3. Choreology and Choreological Studies. Júlio Mota, Pontifical
Catholic University of Paraná. 1.4 How to move things and words: Laban's
Moving Analysis as Somatic-Performative Research. 1.5. Autistic or
Artistic? Laban's theories applied to child disability as somatic
performative integration. 2. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis:
Interartistic Practice, Creativity, and Dynamic Writing. 2.1. Dance theater
and Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis. 2.2. Infinite dance: Dynamic bodies
and concepts. 2.3. Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Labanotation.
2.4. The 'Mastery of Movement': The categories of Body-Effort-Shape-Space.
2.5. The dialogue among the arts in total body expression. 3. Among Rocks,
Reptiles and Connective Wind Currents: The Body. 3.1. Bartenieff
Principles. 3.1.1. Breath Support and Kinetic Chains. 3.1.2. Core Support.
3.1.3. Dynamic Alignment. 3.1.4. Body Organizations and Developmental
Movement Patterns. 3.1.5. Bony Connections. 3.1.6. Weight Shift for
Locomotion. 3.1.7. Initiation and Sequencing. 3.1.8. Gradated Rotation.
3.1.9. Effort Life for Body Connectivity. 3.1.10. Spatial Intent. 3.2.
Bartenieff Fundamentals. 3.2.1. Preparatory Exercises. 3.2.2. The Basic
Six. 3.3. Posture/Gesture Merger. 3.4. Gesture and Posture according to
Laban and Lamb. Júlio Mota. 3.4.1. The Legacy of Rudolf von Laban. 3.5.
Other Concepts and Symbols of Body. 3.5.1. Body Parts. 3.5.2. Upper and
Lower Limbs. 3.5.3. Bodily Actions. 4. Effort or Eukinetics: Pitches and
Colors of a Poetic Body. 4.1. The Flow Factor. 4.1.1. Free flow. 4.1.2.
Bound flow. 4.2. The space factor. 4.2.1. Indirect space. 4.2.2. Direct
space. 4.3. The weight factor. 4.3.1. Light weight. 4.3.2. Strong weight.
4.4. The time factor. 4.2.1. Sustained time. 4.2.2. Quick time. 4.5. The
Effort Factors and Quaternary Correspondences. 4.6. Pre-Effort. 4.6.1.
Space Pre-Effort. 4.6.2. Weight Pre-Effort. 4.6.3. Time Pre-Effort. 4.7.
The Combination of Factors. 4.7.1. Effort States. 4.7.2. Effort Drives.
4.8. Effort Phrases and Phrasing. 4.8.1. Effort Phrases. 4.8.2. Effort
Phrasing. 5. Putting the Body Relationships in Shape. 5.1. Shape Flow.
5.1.1. Growing/opening/unfolding. 5.1.2. Shrinking/closing/folding. 5.1.3.
Growing and Shrinking Alternately. 5.2. Spoke-Like and Arc-Like
Directional. 5.3. Shaping. 5.4. Specific Shapes Created by the Body. 5.5.
Relationships. 6. The Architecture of Moving Spaces. 6.1. Space Harmony.
Susanne Schlicher, Professor/Dramaturg, Theaterakademie Hamburg/Hochschule
für Musik und Theater (Hamburg University of Music and Theatre. 6.1.1.
Space Harmony and Bartenieff Fundamentals. 6.2. Kinesphere. 6.3. Reach
Space. 6.3.1. Small Kinesphere- Near Reach. 6.3.2. Medium Kinesphere- Mid
Reach. 6.3.3. Large Kinesphere- Far Reach. 6.4. Crosses of Axes. 6.4.1.
Standard Cross of Axes. 6.4.2. Body Cross of Axes. 6.4.3. Constant Cross of
Axes. 6.5. Crystalline Forms. 6.5.1. The Tetrahedron. 6.5.2. The Octahedron
and its Three Dimensions. 6.5.3. The Cube and its Four Diagonals. 6.5.4.
The Icosahedron and its Three Planes. 6.5.5. The Dodecahedron and its Three
Planes. 6.6. Spatial Pathway. 6.6.1. Central Pathway. 6.6.2. Transverse
Pathway. 6.6.3. Peripheral Pathway. 6.7. Spatial Tension. 6.7.1. Central
Tension. 6.7.2. Transverse Tension. 6.7.3. Peripheral Tension. 6.8. Other
concepts and symbols of Space. 7. Associating Body-Effort-Shape-Space. 7.1.
Choreutics: Tuning and turning compositions. 7.1.1. Affinities in the
Octahedron Dimensions. 7.1.2. Affinities in the Cube Diagonals. 7.1.3.
Affinities in the Isocahedron Planes. 7.1.4. From points in Space to
movement composition: The Personal Scale. 7.1.5. From Shape Flow to
movement composition: Authentic Movement. 7.2. Body Attitude. 7.2.1. Body.
7.2.2. Effort Stress. 7.2.3. Shape Stress. 7.2.4. Space Stress. 7.3. Themes
of Continuous Dynamics and Change. 7.3.1. Inner/Outer. 7.3.2.
Exertion/Recuperation. 7.3.3. Function/Expression. 7.3.4.
Mobility/Stability. 8. Mapping Bodily Histories: Drawing the Moving
Body-Text. 8.1. The observation of human movement for description. 8.2. The
description of human movement. 8.2.1. The Effort-Shape Horizontal Motif.
8.2.2. The Discursive Description and the Vertical Motif Description.
8.2.3. The Detailed Description. 8.3. Simplified Movement Analysis. 8.3.1.
LMA Simplified Coding Sheet. 8.3.2. Filling Out the Simplified Coding
Sheet- An Example. 8.3.3. Applying the Simplified Coding Sheet to dance
movement analysis: Bahian urban environment and daily life in the moves of
'Hidden Agenda' by Tran Chan Dance Company. 8.4. Detailed Movement
Analysis. 8.4.1. LMA Detailed Coding Sheet. 8.4.2. Filling out the Detailed
Coding Sheet- An Example. 8.4.3. Applying the Detailed Coding Sheet to
character movement analysis: Carmen Maura in the Pedro Almodóvar's film
'Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown.' Ciane Fernandes. Susanne
Schlicher. Rosel Grassmann, Artist and Director at Wilderness BodyPainting,
Independent Concept and Photo Artist of Movement Studies. Works Cited.