Re: Soft for Dancers Up Date #2/ Articles On Line[was dance and language thread]

From: Armando Menicacci (armando@noos.fr)
Date: 04/08/02


I'm really sorry Kema, I must apologize: my English must be really 
awful if you understood this from my proposal. English is not my 
first language (it isn't even my second), so I might have expressed 
in an ambiguous way As a matter of fact, I didn't say at all what you 
mention. Maybe I can take some more time to go deeper into 
biomechanics, but, to be short, I haven't said that a movement has no 
"transference of weight" simply because there is a displacement of 
the center of gravity in almost every human movement even if there is 
no "weight transference". A human being is always making gestures 
since all the segments translations are related to intentions and 
intentions are modulating the gamma nervous system. What I wanted to 
say is that in every gesture there is a movement (segment 
displacement) PLUS something else that is related to what we call 
"tonic function" or that physiology calls A.P.A or Anticipatory 
Postural Adaptation (My translation of "Adaptation Posturale 
Anticipatoire must be very bad, but I only know some physiology in 
Italian and French. My medical english is pretty poor.

I apologize again. Please feel free to mail again if something is not 
clear in my proposal

Best regards

>to keep it simple and straightforward :
>
>In terms of dance, not a dictionary definition,
>
>  a gesture is a movement that has no transference of weight i.e. a 
>hand raised, a nod of the head basically a movement that does not 
>travel.
>Something that any intermediate dance student would know.
>
>Kema
>
>>
>>First of all let me repeat that for me there is a difference between movement
>>and gesture that is essential. To b really short a movement is the change of
>>spatial position of a joint in relation to a reference system (e.g. 3D
>>coordinates). On the other side all the definitions of gesture are 
>>leading to the
>>question of meaning. A gesture, for most of the dictionaries I've seen is a
>>movement that has a particular meaning for an ethnic group.
>>For example there are movements in a mechanical watch or in a locomotive,
>>but there is no gesture.
>
>--
>Kema T. Ekpei Esq.
>
>kema@kema.org.uk
>www.kema.org.uk


-- 
___________
Armando



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