Results 21 to 30 of about 1,340 (121)

Screendance: Yes, And…

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2013
No abstract available. This review essay was originally published by Parallel Press, an imprint of the University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries, as part of The International Journal of Screendance, Volume 3 (2013), Parallel Press.
Karen Pearlman
doaj   +4 more sources

Reflecting on Light Moves Festival of Screendance 2018

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2019
A review of Light Moves Festival of Screendance 2018.
Katrina McPherson
doaj   +3 more sources

Artistic Strategies in the screendance Fôlego

open access: yesRevista Brasileira de Estudos da Presença, 2023
This article explores the screendance Fôlego (2018), whose theme addresses the violence practiced against black bodies in contemporary times. To that end, this work presents a brief overview about the historicity of slavery in Brazil, in particular ...
Diogo Angeli, Marcelo Rocco
doaj   +1 more source

Screendance as enactment in Maya Deren’s At Land

open access: yesDATJournal, 2018
The dancer, choreographer, and filmmaker Maya Deren can be seen as one of the pioneers of screendance. Her experimental films have challenged conventional plot- driven mainstream cinema by emphasizing an ambiguous experience, open for multiple ...
Pia Tikka
doaj   +6 more sources

Screendance Festivals and Online Audiences

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2021
No abstract available.
Harmony Bench   +5 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Lithium dancing (hidden in plain sight)

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2022
In this article I explore screendance’s affair with social media, and the logics of production and consumption endemic to dancing for and with smartphones.
Simon Ellis
doaj   +1 more source

Screendance in the Wake of Screened Dance: Moving Forward Through Interactive Video

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2021
This paper argues that screendance has always had a potential for interactivity, looks specifically at interactive video, and tracks its history through video art and video games.
Callum Anderson
doaj   +1 more source

Editorial: Expanded Screendance

open access: yesThe International Journal of Screendance, 2020
No abstract available.
Kyra Norman, Marisa Zanotti
openaire   +3 more sources

Things that start slowly

open access: yesBody, Space & Technology Journal, 2013
This article looks at the relationship of Screendance, time and loss through an analysis of a film triptych, made in 2010, called 'Things that start slowly'. With particular reference to Mulvey’s 'Death 24x a Second: Stillness and the Moving Image (2006)'
Anna Macdonald
doaj   +4 more sources

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