Dance, Patterned and Rhythmic Bodily Movements, Usually Performed To Music, That Serve As A
Dance, Patterned and Rhythmic Bodily Movements, Usually Performed To Music, That Serve As A
Dance, Patterned and Rhythmic Bodily Movements, Usually Performed To Music, That Serve As A
The ordinary potential of the body can be expanded in dance, usually through long periods of
specialized training. In ballet, for example, the dancer exercises to rotate, or turn out, the legs at
the hips, making it possible to lift the leg high in an arabesque. In India, some dancers learn to
choreograph their eyeballs and eyebrows. Costuming can extend the body's capabilities. Toe or
pointe shoes, stilts, and flying harnesses are a few of the artificial aids employed by dancers.
The primary elements of dance include (1) the use of space—floor patterns, the shapes of the
moving body, and designs in space made by the limbs; (2) the use of time—tempo, the length of
a dance, rhythmic variations, and the attitude toward filling time, from taking one's time to
making quick stops and starts; (3) the use of the body's weight—overcoming gravity to execute
light, graceful movements, surrendering to gravity with heavy or limp movements, or exerting
the body's weight against gravity with strength; and (4) the use of energy flow—tense,
restrained, or bound movements or freely flowing motion.
Kinds of Dance
Two main kinds of dance exist: dances for participation, which do not need spectators; and
dances for presentation, which are designed for an audience. Dances for participation include
work dances, some forms of religious dance, and recreational dances such as folk dances and
popular, or social, dances. To ensure that everyone in a community can take part in them, such
dances often consist of repetitive step patterns that are easy to learn.
Presentational dances are often performed in royal courts, temples, or theaters; the dancers may
be professionals, and the dance may be considered art. The movements tend to be relatively
difficult and require specialized training.
Dance often occurs at rites of passage, or ceremonies performed when an individual passes from
one role to another. Thus, birth, initiation, graduation, marriage, succession to political office,
and death may be marked by dancing. Dance may also be a part of courtship. In some societies
dances may be the only events at which young people of different sexes can meet. In
contemporary society, dances also provide important occasions for young people to socialize.
Work too may be in the form of dance. Rhythmic movements may make the work go more
quickly and efficiently, as in Japanese rice-planting dances. Dance is an art form in some
cultures, and in the 20th century some dances that originated as elaborate religious rituals or
court entertainments have been adapted to the theater.