Reciprocal Encounters: An Investigation into the Perception of Language Through the Interpretation of Instructions in Movement Scores / Nina Murphy (2023)

Reciprocal Encounters: An Investigation into the Perception of Language Through the Interpretation of Instructions in Movement Scores

Author: Nina Murphy

Course: MFA Creative Practice

Year: 2023

Keywords: Choreography, Language, Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, 1908-1961, Movement analysis, Perception (Philosophy), Phenomenology,

Abstract

This thesis explores a year-long journey into the investigation of the perception of language using instructions in movement scores. This thesis follows the above by examining the ideas of Ecologist David Abram and his connections with the teachings of Maurice Merleau-Ponty on the phenomenology of perception. These understandings in relation to how language has previously been practiced by artists such as William Forsythe and Miranda Tufnell were a guide in developing a series of movement workshops culminating in five weeks of movement sessions with two participants. These sessions showed how, as a facilitator, changing the language used in a movement score elicits diverse outcomes. As a result of these sessions, a forty-minute structured improvisational performance was created where the audience experiences an intimate relationship with the performers as all persons are in the Trinity Laban Conservatoire’s Bonnie Bird Theatre. A central element of the performance was a series of instructions delivered to the audience as suggestions on how to experience the performance.

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Metadata

dc.contributor.author
dc.date.accessioned 2024-04-24 11:43
dc.date.copyright 2023
dc.identifier.uri https://researchonline.trinitylaban.ac.uk/oa/thesis/?p=2994
dc.description.abstract

This thesis explores a year-long journey into the investigation of the perception of language using instructions in movement scores. This thesis follows the above by examining the ideas of Ecologist David Abram and his connections with the teachings of Maurice Merleau-Ponty on the phenomenology of perception. These understandings in relation to how language has previously been practiced by artists such as William Forsythe and Miranda Tufnell were a guide in developing a series of movement workshops culminating in five weeks of movement sessions with two participants. These sessions showed how, as a facilitator, changing the language used in a movement score elicits diverse outcomes. As a result of these sessions, a forty-minute structured improvisational performance was created where the audience experiences an intimate relationship with the performers as all persons are in the Trinity Laban Conservatoire’s Bonnie Bird Theatre. A central element of the performance was a series of instructions delivered to the audience as suggestions on how to experience the performance.

dc.language.iso EN
dc.subject Choreography
dc.subject Language
dc.subject Merleau-Ponty, Maurice, 1908-1961
dc.subject Movement analysis
dc.subject Perception (Philosophy)
dc.subject Phenomenology
dc.title Reciprocal Encounters: An Investigation into the Perception of Language Through the Interpretation of Instructions in Movement Scores
thesis.degree.name MFA Creative Practice
dc.date.updated 2024-04-24 11:43

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APA
Murphy, Nina. (2023). Reciprocal Encounters: An Investigation into the Perception of Language Through the Interpretation of Instructions in Movement Scores (Masters’ theses). Retrieved https://researchonline.trinitylaban.ac.uk/oa/thesis/?p=2994