Dance As Our Source in Dance/Movement Therapy Education and Practice
Dance As Our Source in Dance/Movement Therapy Education and Practice
Dance As Our Source in Dance/Movement Therapy Education and Practice
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Patricia Capello
Maimonides Medical Center
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Patricia P. Capello
Introduction
festivals. The panigyri incorporates many of the old customs, and today
the women cook elaborate meals for the whole community, where there is
plenty of free wine for all, and, of course, dancing!
The literal translation of the word panigyri is ‘‘everyone participates.’’
So, everyone participates in the eating, the drinking, and the dancing.
The ideal that everyone participates (despite their level of ability or
disability) is certainly a basic dance/movement therapy belief. The main
focus of the panigyria is the dancing that goes on until the early morning
hours, but, it’s within the particular form – the traditional dances with
their small local step variations – that the people display personal
expression, alleviation of tension, and exhibition of skill. Being in the
here-and-now, moving with synchrony to a common rhythm while sup-
porting the feeling of belonging, are fundamental dance/movement
therapy concepts. The dance is performed in a circle, usually tightly
closed with hands holding each other’s shoulders. The local musicians
provide the strong and repetitive rhythms that allow the participants to
connect with the group and with the surrounding natural environment.
The repetition allows the very young, the tourists and strangers, along
with the other Greeks, to learn and to be able to fall in step and follow the
dance. This can be compared to the dance/movement therapist guiding
the session using repetition and simple patterns for the members to
identify and reproduce, leading to a sense of success and satisfaction.
Frequent jumps provide for much laughter and merriment, and break
the repetition in unexpected ways. The pervasive enthusiasm and zeal
allows for transcendence on both an individual and a group level. The
dance then becomes the vehicle for promoting group cohesion, attesting
cultural values, and confirming local identities.
Thatcher concluded by relating a verbal exchange with an ‘‘old, white-
haired woman’’ who told her while dancing: ‘‘These tourists – let them
see who we are – they can also learn from us!’’ Thatcher sees this elder’s
comment as an example of how letting the tourists participate in the
islanders’ cultural institution permits the Greeks to feel confident in
their own sense of belonging and less threatened by the tremendous
impact of the tourists. With the influx of tourism, which increases every
summer, the Greek people need to maintain their local and national
identities. For Thatcher, celebrating the name days of the saints through
the panigryia allows them to do what intra-psychically is essential for
them to do: affirm their ‘‘Greekness’’ while, at the same time, promote
their sense of local identity, similar to the way in which dance/movement
therapy brings people together beyond individual differences in a format
known to all, yet recognizable as uniquely their own. Finally, as she
led members of the audience in a tightly held circle dance to lively,
traditional music, we all had the opportunity to witness and experience a
joyful panigryia.
Dance as Our Source 41
went on to explain her view that this dance form offers young people the
chance to experience the clear distribution of male and female roles while
helping them express the different traditional tasks ritualized in the
Beseda as well as explore the concept of distance and closeness while
belonging to a group. Songs expressing a range of emotions accompany
the dances.
In conclusion, Bednarova stated that other dance styles have found
their way to the Czech Republic: belly dance, African dance, Jewish
dance, and samba; and dance/movement therapists can make use of all of
these, along with the traditional national dance forms. Finally,
Bednarova led members of the audience in a traditional circle dance that
featured holding hands and swinging arms. To the delight of the par-
ticipants and spectators, the quick and lively movements to traditional
music progressed with steps in and out of the circle with hands held on
the hips.
To acknowledge this year’s collaborative conference with the National
Dance Educator Organization (NDEO), Dr. Julie A. Kerr-Berry was an
invited Panel discussant whose expertise is in the area of world dance. As
a founding member of the NDEO, Kerr-Berry also serves as Co-Editor-in-
Chief of its official journal, the Journal of Dance Education. She focused
her remarks on the links between ‘‘first cultures’’ and the roots of dance/
movement therapy. Drawing on her knowledge of world dance, she stated
that the common denominator is their use of ritual. Further, she stated
that American society is circling back on itself, to its roots of ritual from
where it came. She described her first-hand experience of this when she
encountered people from cultures other than her own, whose ‘‘movement
diet’’ was rich in ritual and used as a mediating force.
Kerr-Berry then went on to say that she sees specific ‘‘signposts’’ in
American society that indicate her country’s reinvestigation of ritual. For
example, she cited the Native American Renaissance that has been
happening for the past two decades or the use of ritual at the yearly 9/11
memorials. She then referenced the 2005 documentary film RIZE which
focused on the power of movement, played out through danced-rituals,
such as ‘‘clowning’’ and ‘‘crumping,’’ which functioned to mediate, to
interrupt, and to sustain a young marginalized, urban, black population
through creative alternatives.
Kerr-Berry discussed how her pedagogy for teaching both world dance
and dance history courses is founded on the dancing body as a ‘‘barom-
eter’’ of social and cultural realities. Her primary purpose in these
courses is to broaden student understanding of dance, challenge their
previous definitions of dance, and encourage lively discourse about how
dance in the US and abroad is a product of cultural fusion that brought
together different groups of people; and this ‘‘dance’’ has been going on
since we took our first steps as human beings.
44 Patricia P. Capello
Bon Festival Dance occurs in July when the Japanese have a tradition
of organizing a festival for worshiping ancestors. It is characterized by
people dancing individually, but as part of a group, and without creating
pairs. The individuals and the group can communicate within the culture
of a shared sense of community. This kind of dance, which is performed
by people of various ages, enhances a sense of belonging and a spirit of
unity among the dancers. It also creates a basis of mutual cooperation.
There are no professional Bon dancers: every dancer is an amateur such
as an ordinary farmer or everyday citizen. The Bon Festival dance has
specific choreography and dance forms, but it is easy to imitate and
perform. Many dance/movement therapists use Bon Festival Dance in
their sessions. In fact, most mental health hospitals in Japan regularly
hold Bon Festival Dance gatherings as part of the therapeutic experience.
Lastly, Butoh is a relatively new dance that was born in the 20th
century from the influence of modern dances but based on Japanese
culture. Butoh dancers often use themes of everyday life and can express
the varied movements of sensuality, ‘‘broken’’ shapes, and those that
symbolize the dead, the disturbed, the handicapped, or the elderly.
Because these dance performances are unusual and differ from the
popular perception or ideal of beauty, Butoh captivates the soul of the
more sophisticated audience. While an unusual dance form, the training
techniques of Butoh appear to be very useful for dance/movement
therapy training and practice.
Panelist Dr. Boon Soon Ryu of Korea began her discussion of the
universality of dance by describing Moon Dance (gang gang sul le) as a
symbolic movement expressing tradition, custom, religion, and faith in
accordance with the cycle of the universe and nature. Honoring and
learning from seasonal changes and the waxing and waning of the moon
is a living principle for Koreans. In the Moon Dance, the circular shape of
the moon is a fundamental figure and, like the shape of the sun, repre-
sents all of nature. These symbols depict abundance, growth, and vital-
ity. They can also refer to ideas of unity and solidarity in nature, the
universe and the life cycle. Moon Dance, a famous Korean group dance
that was enjoyed by Koreans in ancient times, features the singing of an
‘‘occult song.’’ This chanting, or sung prayer, played a role in creating an
atmosphere and inspired certain actions and use of the imagination. The
dance incorporated the divine, artistry, and entertainment.
Holding a special meaning for women, Moon Dance became an object
of prayer and ritual in which the dancers place a bowl of water in front of
themselves and pray to the moon, hoping to absorb its energy. The
movement of the dance expresses desire for fertility, reproduction, and
birth, and another task of this dance for is to resolve conflict and combine
emotional with physical energy.
46 Patricia P. Capello
ethnic dance is now imported from the European continent to enrich the
dance scene.
According to Parvia, most dance/movement therapy students seem to
have trained in post-modern dance forms that give ample freedom for
moving, experimentation, and expression. She feels, however, that there
continues to be something missing: a center to work from, a source of
strength, varying use of energy, or, perhaps, a deeper commitment to
dance and a fuller understanding of the possibilities of dance in therapy.
She feels that it is the task of the dance/movement therapy educator first
to cope with the fundamental ideas of the students, and then to widen
and deepen their understanding of the concepts of dance/movement
therapy. As an educator, she looks for the subtleties in the students’
movements and strives to provide the student with a firm work base
within her or his own self, knowing and then using her or his creative
resources. In this way, Parvia believes, the student of dance/movement
therapy can learn to handle what she refers to as multi-level therapeutic
processes and transformations.
In her report from Taiwan, Tsung Chin Lee asked many intriguing
questions, such as: Is dance the source or the limitation for dance/
movement therapy? She feels that even the word ‘‘dance’’ is interpreted
individually, based on a person’s fantasy of the meaning of dance; and
she shared that, in her experience as a practicing dance/movement
therapist, she often encounters people who expect her to teach them how
to dance, or those who expect her to have a ‘‘perfect body.’’ Years of
practice have led her to understand how to respond to these miscon-
ceptions. Working with the principle that dance/movement therapy
promotes self-awareness, she helps her clients remove or clarify any
fantasies they may have about dance, and she leads them back to focus
on their own body through the use of verbal cues and questions to initiate
movement explorations.
Tsung Chin Lee attempts to get beyond the biological indicators, to
the ‘‘felt-sense,’’ and, through this process of movement exercises guided
by verbal questioning, she observes, the therapist is examining the client
on both a body and cognitive level, assisting him or her in removing the
constraints of a narrow focus about dance, and offering a broader view.
At this point, the dance and movement expression could be enhanced and
developed into a therapeutic experience.
Explaining Taiwanese culture, Lee emphasized that, even though it is
a small island, the Taiwanese have more than 70 channels on TV. People
in Taiwan learn quickly through the TV programs and are tremendously
affected by celebrities. Many celebrities convey various styles of body
expression, such as belly dance, ballroom dance, etc. She reported that,
in Hollywood movies such as Shall We Dance, the movie stars wear
48 Patricia P. Capello
delicate costumes that reveal their beautiful bodies, and these images
generate various fantasies about dance.
The traditional culture in Taiwan is also portrayed on television.
According to Lee, the public sees the powerful steps of the Eight Will
(Chinese ancient god), the modest postures of the fairies and the Tradi-
tional Chinese Dragon & Lion Dance during the Chinese New Year, and
these forms of physical expression are familiar to Taiwanese people and
embody their movement abilities. Consequently, Lee makes use of these
ancient dance forms such as the Dragon Dance to elicit the flow of the
group, or the strong steps of the Eight Will when there is a compression
of emotions in the group. To demonstrate her point, members of
the audience became dancers who formed the shape of a dragon, with the
arms curving right and left while doing small quick running around the
circle. The dance ended with the dancers doing a diagonal reach from
heel to fingertips. The personification of the ‘‘dragon’’ was further
enhanced by the dancers shaking and wiggling their hips to create the
moving tail.
Lee believes that, with the training in dance therapy, therapists can
read/decode the meaning and the information of body movement from the
mass system of body expressions, allowing us to absorb non-verbal lan-
guage as a resource that can apply to different people and guide the
client to integrate body and mind. She has respect and appreciation for
all types of dance and performance, but, as a dance/movement therapist,
she believes it is more important to learn the movement qualities
appropriate for the skill level of the client, and the basis of the psycho-
logical needs of the client’s culture, than it is to be accomplished in the
technical skill of dance, itself. Lee acknowledged that, in the past, dance
therapy in Taiwan was opened by western modern dance but that she
has found that the body in Taiwan has its own unique mien.
In her description of an on-going dance/movement therapy group with
hospitalized psychiatric patients in Argentina, Maralia Reca included
some basic treatment goals of relaxation, communication, reality testing,
and expression of emotions. She proposed the use of folk rhythms in the
sessions to address the characteristic poor body image issues of slumped
posture and limp limbs with limited sense of the feeling of weight, and
poor use of space when moving. As other panelists have contended, using
culturally familiar folk music and the simple formations of the dance, a
healthy collective memory is promoted, allowing patients to rebuild a
sense of mastery and empowerment. The organizing effect of beginning
and ending a dance together as a group increases their patients’ rela-
tionship to reality and their environment.
Reca continued by saying that the basic formations required by the
dance (lines, circles, couples) have helped patients move with clear
directions in the space, sharing steps and, thus, contributing to a better
Dance as Our Source 49
simple rhythms. She emphasizes that all these movement styles allow an
individual to express, communicate, feel confident, enhance her or his
body language, and inspire self-dignity, thereby overcoming the negative
feelings of trauma and aggression.
The final comments made on this year’s Panel were from Dr. Meg
Chang (United States) who, in the absence of Maria-Lusie Obrem, the
scheduled presenter, acted as the ADTA Discussant. Chang summed up
by citing the influence of culture on dance. Since dance/movement
therapy explicitly focuses on the psychological significance of the dance
to the dancer, one must look beyond the simple form of the dance, which
it seeks to give a voice to embodied knowledge, making it imperative that
movement and dance are understood within their cultural context.
Realizing that what we see in a dance is shaped and conditioned both by
our own home culture and that of the dancer’s, we cannot assume that
movements will mean the same thing in another culture.
Conclusion