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This book examines two dance theatre productions created for international touring: Mika HAKA (NZ); The Sound of Silence (India). The companies, Torotoro & Samudra, make dance from their hereditary martial arts expressive disciplines involving practitioners in displays of prowess that are always spectacles contiguous with dance. The productions examined also use movement practices in global circulation, & are often presented before predominantly white audiences. They are generically unstable works the product of cultural interactions in which contradictory agendas converge. The productions…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book examines two dance theatre productions created for international touring: Mika HAKA (NZ); The Sound of Silence (India). The companies, Torotoro & Samudra, make dance from their hereditary martial arts expressive disciplines involving practitioners in displays of prowess that are always spectacles contiguous with dance. The productions examined also use movement practices in global circulation, & are often presented before predominantly white audiences. They are generically unstable works the product of cultural interactions in which contradictory agendas converge. The productions propagate images of idealised men that create statements of national & cultural identity. They are implicated in the performative construction of gender, ethnicity & race. Torotoro & Samudra s performances, influenced by queer-feminist agendas, offer insights into martial dance theatre s potential contribution to the intercultural negotiation of identities. European theatre practitioners have long sought to employ martial arts to develop Western performers. Considering these disciplines performative cultural functions, what are the implications for this transcultural project?
Autorenporträt
Mark trained at Birmingham University (UK), and with classical Indian dancer Priya Srikumar. His doctorate was awarded by Canterbury University (NZ). His research explores transcultural principles for performance training, synthesising the European lineages of Laban, Grotowski and Hart, and that which he has learnt in Polynesia and Kerala.