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Issues in Labananalysis Research: Seeking Notation Solutions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2014

Extract

As part of on-going research in ethnology and notation I have been documenting Japanese bon dancing in Hawaii. Notating the dances has proved to be a challenge, not so much because of the difficulty of movement patterns, but because of the problem of deciding what to notate. Perhaps because of the emphasis on the event itself and the stress on community participation, uniformity in movement style (of the type found in professional theatrical traditions) is not important. Dancers tend to emulate the style of a favorite dancer or move in a manner that looks good or feels good to themselves. Because of the age and cultural differences of participants – which today range from children of elementary school age to senior citizens, and include Americans of Japanese, non-Japanese, and mixed ancestry – what looks good or feels good is tremendously variable.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 1981

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References

NOTES

1. Bon dancing is a type of Japanese folk dance performed as part of a Buddhist temple celebration to honor the deceased known as O-bon. For a full explanation of bon dancing in Hawaii, including Labanotation scores for ten dances, see Van Zile, Judy, Japanese Bon Dance in Hawaii. Honolulu: Press Pacifica Google Scholar, forthcoming.

2. There are many important considerations to be dealt with by the researcher using Labanotation. Only a sample of these issues is described here. A more extensive exploration of issues to be considered in using movement analysis as a research tool may be found in the report of a 1980 research project coordinated by Judy Van Zile and executed by Irmgard Bartenieff, Peggy Hackney, Betty True Jones, Judy Van Zile, and Carl Wolz.