Ethnochoreology
The systematic, comparative analysis of the structure of traditional and folk dance, especially within the European research tradition.
Definition
The systematic structural and comparative analysis of traditional dance forms.
Scope
This topic covers ethnochoreology, the structural and comparative study of dance, particularly traditional and folk forms. It includes methods for segmenting dance into structural units, classifying motifs and forms, and comparing dances across regions, associated with the International Council for Traditional Music study group and with structural approaches such as Kaeppler's analysis of dance grammars.
Core questions
- How can dance be segmented into analyzable structural units?
- How are motifs and forms classified and compared across regions?
- What is the relationship between dance structure and cultural meaning?
Key concepts
- structural units
- motif analysis
- morphology
- comparison
- dance grammar
Key theories
- Structural analysis of dance grammars
- The approach, modeled partly on linguistics, of identifying minimal structural units of movement and the rules by which they combine, enabling rigorous description and comparison of dance.
History
Ethnochoreology developed especially in Central and Eastern Europe and through international study groups devoted to traditional dance, refining methods for the structural segmentation and comparison of folk dance, while parallel structural analyses emerged in the anthropology of dance.
Debates
- Linguistic models for dance structure
- Researchers debate how far linguistic analogies, such as treating movements as a grammar of units and rules, capture the nature of dance, or whether they impose an ill-fitting framework.
Key figures
- Anca Giurchescu
- Adrienne Kaeppler
- György Martin
Related topics
Seminal works
- kaeppler1972
- giurchescu1999
Frequently asked questions
- What is ethnochoreology?
- Ethnochoreology is the systematic, comparative study of dance, especially traditional and folk dance, focusing on analyzing its structure and form across cultures and regions.