Basics of Dance Aesthetics 2
Subject is not scheduled Not scheduled
Code | Completion | Credits | Range | Language Instruction | Semester |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
107EBDA2 | ZK | 2 | 1ST | English | summer |
Subject guarantor
Name of lecturer(s)
Learning outcomes of the course unit
- the ability to independently develop your creative thinking
- mastery of the ability to develop their communication, interaction, pedagogical and creative competences
- the ability to explain and describe their pedagogical approach or the artistic intention of a work conceptually
- the ability to work with required literature
- the ability to present their work publicly
- have the skills necessary to document their own creative work and be able to create and archive materials for the development of an art portfolio, with an emphasis on systematicity
Mode of study
seminar
Prerequisites and co-requisites
none
Course contents
Learning objectives:
The course contains the issues of general aesthetics applied to special dance aesthetics, which is further developed in other thematic areas. Students develop other aesthetic categories and concepts related to movement and the body (in dance). They focus on the interpretation of specific examples in dance using basic general philosophical knowledge.
Instruction is based on the ability to construct thinking and understanding of concepts, which are conducted through professional disputation. This type of interactive lecture and debate leads the student to self-reflection and aids in effective problem solving. Professional guidance ensures the quality of understanding of aesthetics and the acquisition of professional discourse in which the student uses the acquired knowledge and skills of the field and demonstrates the ability to apply them in a distinctive way.
The goal of the study is to develop knowledge of other aesthetic phenomena, relationships, observation, cognition, and the ability to verbalize the spiritual level of thinking about and presenting the art of dance. Students are introduced to attitudes toward art and the world through a particular form of confrontation, the interconnectedness of understanding life and artistic performance, and the lens of openness and collaboration of the phenomena they learn about.
Thematic areas:
- the question of the many functionalities of meaning arising from the multiplicity of the world
- social cultivation and development of the human personality
- Taste: one's own disposition, opinions, predilections, education, influences, experiences
- ambiguity
- visual communication
- aesthetic perception
- individuality and uniqueness
- representation and demonstration
- semiotic and receptive aesthetics
- aesthetics of consumption
- presentation - representation: meaning and effect
Recommended or required reading
Required reading
ARISTOTLE. Poetics. Penguin Classics, 1997. ISBN 978-0140446364.
BEST, David. Expression in Movement and The Arts. London: Henry Kimpton Publishers, 1974.
DAVIES, Stephen ed. Companion to Aesthetics. Willey-Blackwell, 2009. ISBN 978-1405169226.
ROYCE PETERSON, Anya. The Antropology of Dance. Vyd. 1. Indiana University Press 1977. ISBN 978-1852730888.
TOWNSEND, Dabney. The A to Z of Asthetics. Scarecrow Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0810875814.
Recommended reading:
JANEČEK, Václav. Tělo a tanec. 1. vyd. Praha: Akademie múzických umění v Praze, 1997. 103 s. ISBN 80-85883-23-6.
LENDEROVÁ, Milena. Dějiny těla : prameny, koncepty, historiografie. 1. vydání. Červený Kostelec: Pavel Mervart, 2013. 261 stran. ISBN 978-80-7465-068-0.
Základní pojmy divadla: teatrologický slovník. 1. vyd. Praha: Libri Národní divadlo v Praze, 2004. 348 s. ISBN 80-7277-194-9.
ZICH, Otakar. Estetika dramatického umění: teoretická dramaturgie. 2. vyd. Praha: Panorama, 1987.
ZUSKA, Vlastimil. Estetika: úvod do současnosti tradiční disciplíny. Vyd. 1. Praha: Triton, 2001. 132 s. ISBN 80-7254-194-3.
Assessment methods and criteria
Oral examination, examination of knowledge and skills, presentation of research on selected concepts, analysis and defence of written seminar paper (min. 3NS)
Other requirements: 80% attendance, activity in class, completion of partial assignments
Note
none
Further information
No schedule has been prepared for this course