Spine
Subtitle
5 Somatic Strategies for 21st Century Dancers
"Spine" is unique in addressing the connection between dance technique and moving the body from the somatic, experiential perspective.
Imagery is certainly helpful, but needs to be different for each movement. "Spine" strategies are geometric, linking to a progressive anatomic and biomechanical model for the body — tensegrity — solidly connecting movement experience to movement execution allowing the dancer to bridge the gap between the movement goal and the movement process.
Physics deals with biomechanics of movement, but as the observed and measured and not about the somatic perspective. In other somatic books one finds important forays into what movement feels like, but the suggestions are ambiguous, leaving the dancer to explore in the somatic technique and then find a way to connect those ideas to dance technique. Dance technique books typically address technique from the observed and aesthetic perspective and not from the mover's sensational, experiential, perceptual perspective connecting the process to the product of movement goals. "Spine", therefore, can be used by many dance techniques, not just ballet: modern, urban (hip-hop), jazz, and even gymnastics.
"Spine" strategies give the dancer first a vocabulary to talk about the experience of movement and secondly directly connect to the biomechanics of movement without the use of intermediary images that create within the dancer a mental circus that changes from image to image. The "Spine" strategies help to quieten the mental circus and open up the filtering of sensations by the individual so that the somatic experience of movement is more accessible for the dancer. Over time a sophisticated kinesthesia develops.
Bio
Cynthia Roses-Thema earned a PhD in English at Arizona State University in 2007 and also earned a Master of Fine Arts in dance at ASU in 2003. She is currently a principal lecturer in the ASU Herberger Institute's School of Music, Dance and Theatre.