This volume investigates the contributions and achievements of the physically disabled dancer while challenging and recognizing the inherent inequities in the field of integrated dance in the UK which currently places greater emphasis on the learning‑disabled performer.

This is the first book ever written by a physically disabled dancer on the subject of physically disabled dancers. Inherent in this examination is the model of examining disability that is most closely associated with the disability arts movement which is the ‘affirmative model of disability’. This model is defined as an approach to disability in which the disabled person is neither an object of medical care nor a victim of social indifference but a self‑respecting, autonomous individual in which their disability is a positive and affirming aspect of their self‑identity. This book, based on interviews with physically disabled dancers, choreographers, academics and arts producers all in a UK context, combines a wide range of perspective of disability dance together with the intellectual rigour of disability studies to produce a new definition of the physically disabled dancer as an affirming, positive, indispensable practitioner of contemporary performance art. The volume pioneers perspectives of the physically disabled dancer prioritizing first‑person accounts from the performers themselves to produce an unprecedented contribution to the study of disability arts from a uniquely British perspective.

This book will offer educators as well as arts and cultural professionals a critical resource for facilitating work by and in alliance with practitioners of integrated dance.

Les mer

This volume investigates the contributions and achievements of the physically disabled dancer while at the same time challenging and recognizing the inherent inequities in the field of integrated dance in the UK which currently places greater emphasis on the learning-disabled performer.

Les mer

Foreword Professor Sarah Whatley

Preface

Acknowledgements

List of Figures

1. Introduction

2. The Affirmative Model of Disability

Part I

Interviews with Physically Disabled Dancers

3. Marketa Stranska: The Journey of the Amputee Dancer

Candoco Dance

4. Suzie Birchwood: Dancing in and out of the Wheelchair

Independent Dance Artist

5. Isolte Avila: Dancing with Limited Mobility

Signdance Collective

6. Welly O’Brien: The Achievement of the Amputee Dancer

Independent Dance Artist

7. David Grindley: Dancing with Cerebral Palsy

Amici Dance Theatre

Part II

Academics

8. Professor Sarah Whatley: Leading the Way

Centre for Dance Research, Coventry University

9. Dr. Kate Marsh: The Performing Scholar

Centre for Dance Research, Coventry University

Part III

Choreographers and Arts Producers

10. Wolfgang Stange: The Way They Move

Amici Dance Theatre

11. Ingrid Molinos: The Dance of Youth

Young Amici

12. Colm Gallagher: Keeping Them Dancing

Amici Dance Theatre

13. Alison King: Bringing It to the Public

Turtle Key Arts

Part IV

Essays by Lawrence Shapiro

14. Re-imagining the Affirmative Model and the Physically Disabled Dancer

15. Into the Future

Appendix

16. A Conversation with Lawrence Shapiro

Index

Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781032885742
Publisert
2025-05-06
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
600 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, UP, 06, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
308

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Lawrence Shapiro has been a pioneering disabled dancer in his native Canada for over 20 years, is a validated Deaf and Disability Artist with the Canada Council for the Arts and a UK-published dance researcher whose writing on integrated performance has appeared in a variety of publications including Choreographic Practices, Canadian Scholars Press and the Dance Current.