Results for 'Choreographers '

170 found
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  1.  44
    Choreographing Empathy.Susan Leigh Foster & Choreographing Empathy - 2005 - Topoi 24 (1):81-91.
    The paper builds an argument about empathy, kinesthesia, choreography, and power as they were constituted in early eighteenth century France. It examines the conditions under which one body could claim to know what another body was feeling, using two sets of documents – philosophical examinations of perception and kinesthesia by Condillac and notations of dances published by Feuillet. Reading these documents intertextually, I postulate a kind of corporeal episteme that grounds how the body is constructed. And I endeavor to situate (...)
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  2.  12
    Choreographic Cognition: The Time-Course and Phenomenology of Creating a Dance.Catherine Stevens, Stephen Malloch, Shirley McKechnie & Nicole Steven - 2003 - Pragmatics and Cognition 11 (2):297-326.
    The process of inception, development and refinement during the creation of a new dance work is described and explored. The account is based on annotated video of the professional choreographer and dancers as they create and sequence new movement material, as well as weekly journal entries made by one of the dancers. A 24-week chronology is reported. We analyse the choreographic process using the Geneplore model of creative cognition as an organising framework and identify generative and exploratory processes including problem (...)
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  3.  18
    Choreographic cognition: the time-course and phenomenology of creating a dance.Stephen Malloch, Catherine Stevens, Shirley McKechnie & Nicole Steven - 2003 - Pragmatics and Cognition 11 (2):297-326.
    The process of inception, development and refinement during the creation of a new dance work is described and explored. The account is based on annotated video of the professional choreographer and dancers as they create and sequence new movement material, as well as weekly journal entries made by one of the dancers. A 24-week chronology is reported. We analyse the choreographic process using the Geneplore model of creative cognition as an organising framework and identify generative and exploratory processes including problem (...)
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  4. Choreographing the Borderline.Joshua M. Hall - 2012 - Philosophy Today 56 (1):49-58.
    In this paper I will investigate Kristeva’s conception of dance in regard to the trope of the borderline. I will begin with her explicit treatments of dance, the earliest of which occurs in Revolution in Poetic Language, in terms of (a) her analogy between poetry and dance as practices erupting on the border of chora and society, (b) her presentation of dance as a phenomenon bordering art and religion in rituals, and (c) her brief remarks on dance gesturality. I will (...)
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  5.  10
    Choreographing gender in colonial Bengal. The dance work of Rabindranath Tagore and Pratima Devi.Prarthana Purkayastha - 2017 - Clio 46:65-86.
    Cet article s’intéresse aux gestes performatifs et aux pas de danse à travers lesquels les femmes colonisées de la bourgeoisie négocièrent les tensions profondes entre le patriarcat indien et la domination coloniale au Bengale (en Inde) à la fin du xixe et au début du xxe siècle. La première partie examine la contribution du Prix Nobel de poésie, Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941), au développement de la danse au Bengale et replace sa pratique de danse au sein d’une discussion plus large sur (...)
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  6. Choreographing empathy.Susan Leigh Foster - 2004 - Topoi 24 (1):81-91.
    The paper builds an argument about empathy, kinesthesia, choreography, and power as they were constituted in early eighteenth century France. It examines the conditions under which one body could claim to know what another body was feeling, using two sets of documents – philosophical examinations of perception and kinesthesia by Condillac and notations of dances published by Feuillet. Reading these documents intertextually, I postulate a kind of corporeal episteme that grounds how the body is constructed. And I endeavor to situate (...)
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  7.  24
    Choreographing Duets: Gender differences in dance rehearsals.Dafne Muntanyola Saura - 2009 - E-pisteme 2 (2):30-45.
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  8. Choreographing Identities and Emotions in Organizations: Doing “Huminality” on a Geriatric Ward.Gladys Symons - 2009 - Society and Animals 17 (2):115-135.
    This paper addresses the coconstruction of identities and emotions through the human/animal relationship, arguing that nonhuman animals can and do act as coagents in interspecies encounters. The paper narrates the extraordinary boundary-transgressing experiences of a particular kind of cogency labeled “huminality” . An autoethnographic account of pet-visitation involving a woman, a West Highland white terrier named Fergus, and geriatric residents demonstrates the power of huminality to authorize the emergence and realization of different identities and selves. Examples include the intimate friend, (...)
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  9.  4
    Choreographing in Context: Rehearsing Alternative Infrastructures.Kirsten Maar - 2023 - Paragrana: Internationale Zeitschrift für Historische Anthropologie 32 (2):215-227.
    Entlang der Verschiebungen des Kollektivbegriffs seit 1989 und seiner Verwendung in den performativen Künsten – und in Gegenüberstellung zu einer eher netzwerkartig organisierten Gesellschaft der Individuen – beschreibt der Beitrag, wie durch den Fokus auf Praktiken, die nicht das abgeschlossene Werk, sondern den gemeinsamen Prozess des Voneinander-Lernens unter Einbeziehung spezifischer Publika (z.B. aktivistischer Initiativen) fokussieren, die dem Kunstbetrieb zugrunde liegenden Infrastrukturen verändert werden können. Zeit als Infrastruktur spielt dabei eine wesentliche Rolle, um die Prozesse offen zu halten und nachhaltig zu (...)
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  10.  24
    Archaeological choreographic practices: Foucault and Forsythe.Mark Franko - 2011 - History of the Human Sciences 24 (4):97-112.
    Although Michel Foucault never wrote of dance as an example of a bodily discipline in the classical age, he did affect the art of contemporary ballet through his influence on the work of William Forsythe. This article interprets Foucault’s influence on Forsythe up until the early 1990s and also examines how Forsythe’s choreography ‘responded’ to issues of agency, inscription and discipline that characterize Foucault’s thought on corporeality. Ultimately, it asks whether Forsythe’s use of Foucauldian theory leads to a reinterpretation of (...)
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  11.  17
    Expertise in Evaluating Choreographic Creativity: An Online Variation of the Consensual Assessment Technique.Lucie Clements, Emma Redding, Naomi Lefebvre Sell & Jon May - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
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  12.  8
    Social orientation of postmodern choreographic performance in a post-pandemic society.Galyna Buchkivska, Liudmila Pavlishena, Valentyna Greskova, Galyna Matushchak & Sergii Sandulskyi - 2021 - Postmodern Openings 12 (2).
    Today, in a post-pandemic space, all types of art, comprehending, due to their figurative specificity, certain spheres of objective reality, already as a result of this, circumstances have their own, only inherent laws. Using the inexhaustible possibilities of the plasticity of the human body, choreography has refined and developed expressive dance movements for many centuries. As a result of this complex process, a system of choreographic movements arose, that is, a special artistic and expressive speech of plastics, constitutes the creative (...)
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  13.  10
    A Dance-Choreographer speaks: An Interview with James Cunningham.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  14.  7
    Jan Fabre, Choreographer.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  15.  15
    The Dancer: a Dance-choreographer Speaks: An Interview with James Cunningham.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  16.  12
    The Philosopher as Choreographer.Peter Rickman - 2003 - Philosophy Now 41:30-31.
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  17.  6
    Exploring Embodiment Through Choreographic Practice.Angela Pickard - 2018 - Frontiers in Psychology 9.
    This pilot explores embodiment and gender representation through the lens of choreographic practice and sociology. The perspective derives from a comparative lack of status held by female (vs male) choreographers in the UK. The pilot study specifically addresses how choreography itself embodies and perpetuates sociocultural values. This work is part of a larger, on-going ethnographic study into the social world(s) of choreography and choreographers. The method is a process of dance making called Sonnet that would expose habitual expectations (...)
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  18.  19
    Dances, Danceworks, and Choreographic Works: A Plea for Conceptual Clarity.Renee M. Conroy - 2019 - Midwest Studies in Philosophy 44 (1):7-20.
    Midwest Studies In Philosophy, EarlyView.
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  19.  57
    Walking and Other Choreographic Tactics: Danced Inventions of Theatricality and Performativity.Susan Leigh Foster - 2002 - Substance 31 (2/3):125.
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  20.  45
    Learning to like it: Aesthetic perception of bodies, movements and choreographic structure.Guido Orgs, Nobuhiro Hagura & Patrick Haggard - 2013 - Consciousness and Cognition 22 (2):603-612.
    Appreciating human movement can be a powerful aesthetic experience. We have used apparent biological motion to investigate the aesthetic effects of three levels of movement representation: body postures, movement transitions and choreographic structure. Symmetrical and asymmetrical sequences of apparent movement were created from static postures, and were presented in an artificial grammar learning paradigm. Additionally, “good” continuation of apparent movements was manipulated by changing the number of movement path reversals within a sequence. In an initial exposure phase, one group of (...)
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  21.  2
    camivalization of everyday life 254 Cartesian philosophy 15, 214-16,231 choreographer.Berlin Reichstag & Filhos de Ghandy - 2000 - In Stephen Linstead & Heather Höpfl (eds.), The aesthetics of organization. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. pp. 270.
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  22.  3
    Being the Facilitator: A Brief Research Report on the Motivation of the Choreographer and Dance Maker to Work With Heterogeneous Groups in a Community Dance Setting.Mia Sophia Bilitza - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    In inclusive dance settings, where people with different abilities and talents come together, the role of facilitators is essential in guiding the process of inclusion. Their behavior gives sensitive information to the individual about one’s status within the own-group affiliation. Even today, very little research on the motivation for facilitating inclusivity in dance contexts exists. This case study will examine the facilitator’s motivation by juxtaposing current theory next to experiences of seven experts of contemporary dance facilitation in Europe. Good opportunities (...)
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  23.  11
    Between pleasure and censure: Marie Taglioni Choreographer of the Second French Empire.Vannina Olivesi - 2017 - Clio 46:43-64.
    Le présent article explore la reconversion professionnelle de Marie Taglioni, vedette du ballet romantique de la Monarchie de Juillet devenue pédagogue et chorégraphe à l’Opéra de Paris sous le Second Empire. L’examen des sources montre le rôle joué par ses parents dans sa formation à la composition chorégraphique dans un contexte de féminisation de la danse théâtrale professionnelle à l’échelle de l’Europe occidentale. Si la composition féminine demeure l’objet de fortes censures, Marie Taglioni parvient à tisser un réseau professionnel favorable (...)
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  24.  4
    Editorial: Connecting Music and Body Movement: Choreographic Approach of Performance.Zélia Chueke - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
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  25.  48
    Appendix 2: Creating Red Rain: Choreographer Anna Smith's annotations of video, March-September 1999.Anna Smith - 2005 - In Robin Grove, Kate Stevens & Shirley McKechnie (eds.), Thinking in Four Dimensions: Creativity and Cognition in Contemporary Dance. Melbourne Up. pp. 203.
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  26. Acts of transformation: strategies for choreographic intervention in Mark Morris's settings of existing music.Stephanie Jordan - 2018 - In Patrizia Veroli & Gianfranco Vinay (eds.), Music-dance: sound and motion in contemporary discourse. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  27.  2
    Moving without a body: digital philosophy and choreographic thought.Stamatia Portanova - 2013 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press.
    A radically empirical exploration of movement and technology and the transformations of choreography in a digital realm. Digital technologies offer the possibility of capturing, storing, and manipulating movement, abstracting it from the body and transforming it into numerical information. In Moving without a Body, Stamatia Portanova considers what really happens when the physicality of movement is translated into a numerical code by a technological system. Drawing on the radical empiricism of Gilles Deleuze and Alfred North Whitehead, she argues that this (...)
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  28.  18
    The Humanities and Dance: The Contemporary Choreographers' Response in the Arts to Aesthetic and Moral Values.Curtis Carter - unknown
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  29.  16
    Peculiarities of objective evaluation of choreographic preparedness at different stages of long-term athletic performance.Todorova Valentyna - 2017 - Science and Education: Academic Journal of Ushynsky University 22 (2):63-68.
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  30.  2
    The course of a general displacement, or, the course of the choreographer.Lynn Turner - 2009 - In Martin McQuillan & Ika Willis (eds.), The Origins of Deconstruction. Palgrave-Macmillan.
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  31.  6
    Philosophical Essays on Dance, with Responses from Choreographers, Critics, and Dancers: Based on a Conference at the American Dance Festival.Gordon Fancher & Gerald Myers - 1981 - Brooklyn, N.Y. : Dance Horizons.
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  32.  8
    Stamatia Portanova (2013) Moving without a Body: Digital Philosophy and Choreographic Thoughts.Aaron D. Knochel - 2017 - Deleuze and Guatarri Studies 11 (4):608-616.
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  33.  29
    Erin Manning. “Propositions for the Verge: William Forsythe’s Choreographic Objects”. [REVIEW]Jon Ivan Gill - 2013 - Process Studies 42 (1):154-156.
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  34. When the composer's artistic aims clash with the choreographer's autonomy: Sylvano Bussotti, Aurel Milloss, and the "choreographic mystery" Raramente (1970-71). [REVIEW]Ulrich Mosch - 2018 - In Patrizia Veroli & Gianfranco Vinay (eds.), Music-dance: sound and motion in contemporary discourse. New York, NY: Routledge.
     
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  35.  16
    The Dynamic Body in Space: Exploring and Developing Rudolf Laban's Ideas for the 21st Century.Valerie Monthland Preston-Dunlop & Lesley-Anne Sayers (eds.) - 2010 - Dance Books.
    The work and ideas of Rudolf Laban, dancer, choreographer and seminal theoretician of movement and dance, have had a profound impact across a range of disciplines. This book explores this impact.
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  36.  22
    Танець як мистецтво, ритуал та історія.Taras Osadtsiv - 2016 - Схід 2 (142):57-61.
    Пропонована стаття розкриває нові аспекти розуміння історичного процесу та відгуку людської спільноти на них. Адаптаційні процеси, згідно з історичною антропологією, можуть виявлятися в мистецтві та ритуалі. У контексті цієї статті автор розглядає танець, хореографічне мистецтво, як безпосередню реакцію людей на швидкі зміни історичних обставин. Це надає можливість визначати танець як надзвичайно важливий маркер реакції спільноти на нові обставини, у яких ця спільнота опинилася.
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  37. Wedge: A Cross-Disciplinary Collaboration by Janine Antoni and Jill Sigman.Sherri Irvin - 2016 - In Sondra Bacharach, Siv B. Fjærestad & Jeremy Neil Booth (eds.), Collaborative Art in the Twenty-First Century. Routledge. pp. 166-178.
    In 2012, choreographer and dancer Jill Sigman of jill sigman/thinkdance and visual artist Janine Antoni collaborated to produce Wedge, a live performance at the Albright-Knox Gallery. In this essay, I describe the collaboration and the resulting work and examine the benefits and challenges of the collaboration. The discussion touches on broader issues pertaining to collaboration, co-authorship, artists' intentions, and interpretation.
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  38.  49
    Kinesthetic Understanding and Appreciation in Dance.William P. Seeley NoËl Carroll - 2013 - Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 71 (2):177-186.
    The idea that choreographic movements communicate to audiences by kinetic transfer is a commonplace among choreographers, dancers, and dance educators.1 Moreover, most dance lovers can cite their own favorite examples—the bounciness of the Royal Danish Ballet, the stomping of Bharata Natyam performers, the stag leaps in the thundering Greek chorus in Martha Graham’s Night Journey, or the contagious rhythmic transfer that takes over our feet when we watch classic tap dancers like Buster Brown. The perceptual capacity for kinetic transfer (...)
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  39.  14
    He Saw What Was Going to Happen in the World and Put It on Stage.Mary Magada-Ward - 2017 - Journal of Speculative Philosophy 31 (1):177-189.
    ABSTRACT The choreographer George Balanchine famously declared that “I don't create or invent anything, I assemble.” I take the import of this pronouncement to be that he conceived his artistic mission to be that of articulating those liberatory tendencies that, without his work, might very well have remained inchoate for his audience, and I illustrate this reading through an examination of his 1957 masterpiece Agon, a ballet whose central pas de deux is a symbolic violation of the laws against miscegenation.
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  40.  75
    Cosmic hylomorphism: A powerist ontology of quantum mechanics.William M. R. Simpson - 2021 - European Journal for Philosophy of Science 11 (1):1-25.
    The primitive ontology approach to quantum mechanics seeks to account for quantum phenomena in terms of a distribution of matter in three-dimensional space and a law of nature that describes its temporal development. This approach to explaining quantum phenomena is compatible with either a Humean or powerist account of laws. In this paper, I offer a powerist ontology in which the law is specified by Bohmian mechanics for a global configuration of particles. Unlike in other powerist ontologies, however, this law (...)
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  41.  25
    The Choreography of Group Affiliation.Jorina Zimmermann, Staci Vicary, Matthias Sperling, Guido Orgs & Daniel C. Richardson - 2018 - Topics in Cognitive Science 10 (1):80-94.
    When two people move in synchrony, they become more social. Yet it is not clear how this effect scales up to larger numbers of people. Does a group need to move in unison to affiliate, in what we term unitary synchrony; or does affiliation arise from distributed coordination, patterns of coupled movements between individual members of a group? We developed choreographic tasks that manipulated movement synchrony without explicitly instructing groups to move in unison. Wrist accelerometers measured group movement dynamics and (...)
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  42. Quantum physics without quantum philosophy.Detlef Dürr, Sheldon Goldstein & Nino Zanghì - 1995 - Studies in History and Philosophy of Science Part B: Studies in History and Philosophy of Modern Physics 26 (2):137-149.
    Quantum philosophy, a peculiar twentieth-century malady, is responsible for most of the conceptual muddle plaguing the foundations of quantum physics. When this philosophy is eschewed, one naturally arrives at Bohmian mechanics, which is what emerges from Schrodinger's equation for a nonrelativistic system of particles when we merely insist that 'particles' means particles. While distinctly non-Newtonian, Bohmian mechanics is a fully deterministic theory of particles in motion, a motion choreographed by the wave function. The quantum formalism emerges when measurement situations are (...)
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  43.  26
    The Phenomenology of a Performative Knowledge System: Dancing with Native American Epistemology.Shay Welch - 2019 - Cham: Springer Verlag.
    This book investigates the phenomenological ways that dance choreographing and dance performance exemplify both Truth and meaning-making within Native American epistemology, from an analytic philosophical perspective. Given that within Native American communities dance is regarded both as an integral cultural conduit and “a doorway to a powerful wisdom,” Shay Welch argues that dance and dancing can both create and communicate knowledge. She explains that dance—as a form of oral, narrative storytelling—has the power to communicate knowledge of beliefs and histories, and (...)
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  44.  9
    Keith Bain on movement.Keith Bain - 2010 - Strawberry Hills, N.S.W.: Currency House. Edited by Michael Campbell.
    Keith Bain, a born teacher and himself a champion dancer, actor and choreographer, was the first in Australia to create a comprehensive discipline in the study of movement for performance. Over 50 years he has profoundly influenced Australias performers for stage and screen and his book is full of examples of the gentle wisdom recalled by many. With wit and simplicity he tells his life story and reveals the sources behind his belief in the infinite capacity of the human body (...)
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  45.  11
    Motion and representation: the language of human movement.Nicolás Salazar Sutil - 2015 - Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press.
    An examination of the ways human movement can be represented as a formal language and how this language can be mediated technologically. In Motion and Representation, Nicolás Salazar Sutil considers the representation of human motion through languages of movement and technological mediation. He argues that technology transforms the representation of movement and that representation in turn transforms the way we move and what we understand to be movement. Humans communicate through movement, physically and mentally. To record and capture integrated movement (...)
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  46. Dance Appreciation: The View from the Audience.Aili Bresnahan - 2017 - In David Goldblatt, Lee Brown & Stephanie Patridge (eds.), Aesthetics: A Reader in the Philosophy of the Arts, 4th edition. Routledge. pp. 347-350.
    Dance can be appreciated from all sorts of perspectives: For instance, by the dancer while dancing, by the choreographer while watching in the wings, by the musician in the orchestra pit who accompanies the dance, or by the loved-one of a dancer who watches while hoping that the dancer performs well and avoids injury. This essay will consider what it takes to appreciate dance from the perspective of a seated, non-moving audience member. A dance appreciator in this position is typically (...)
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  47.  67
    The political choreography of the Sophia robot: beyond robot rights and citizenship to political performances for the social robotics market.Jaana Parviainen & Mark Coeckelbergh - forthcoming - AI and Society.
    A humanoid robot named ‘Sophia’ has sparked controversy since it has been given citizenship and has done media performances all over the world. The company that made the robot, Hanson Robotics, has touted Sophia as the future of artificial intelligence. Robot scientists and philosophers have been more pessimistic about its capabilities, describing Sophia as a sophisticated puppet or chatbot. Looking behind the rhetoric about Sophia’s citizenship and intelligence and going beyond recent discussions on the moral status or legal personhood of (...)
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  48.  10
    Sophia the Robot as a Political Choreography to Advance Economic Interests: An Exercise in Political Phenomenology and Critical Performance-Oriented Philosophy of Technology.Jaana Parviainen & Mark Coeckelbergh - 2024 - In Thiemo Breyer, Alexander Matthias Gerner, Niklas Grouls & Johannes F. M. Schick (eds.), Diachronic Perspectives on Embodiment and Technology: Gestures and Artefacts. Springer Verlag. pp. 57-66.
    Controversy arose when a humanoid robot named “Sophia” was given citizenship and did performances all over the world. Why should some robots gain citizenship? Going beyond recent discussions in robot ethics and human–robot interaction, and drawing on phenomenological approaches to political philosophy, actor-network theory, and performance-oriented philosophy of technology, we propose to interpret and discuss the world tour of Sophia as a political choreography: we argue that the media performances of the Sophia robot were politically choreographed to advance economic interests. (...)
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  49.  6
    Dancing in Your Head: An Interdisciplinary Review.Andrea Zardi, Edoardo Giovanni Carlotti, Alessandro Pontremoli & Rosalba Morese - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    The aim of this review is to highlight the most relevant contributions on dance in neuroscientific research. Neuroscience has analyzed the mirror system through neuroimaging techniques, testing its role in imitative learning, in the recognition of other people's emotions and especially in the understanding of the motor behavior of others. This review analyses the literature related to five general areas: breakthrough studies on the mirror system, and subsequent studies on its involvement in the prediction, the execution, the control of movement, (...)
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  50.  83
    Apocalypse Forever?Erik Swyngedouw - 2010 - Theory, Culture and Society 27 (2-3):213-232.
    This article interrogates the relationship between two apparently disjointed themes: the consensual presentation and mainstreaming of the global problem of climate change on the one hand and the debate in political theory/philosophy that centers around the emergence and consolidation of a post-political and post-democratic condition on the other. The argument advanced in this article attempts to tease out this apparently paradoxical condition. On the one hand, the climate is seemingly politicized as never before and has been propelled high on the (...)
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