Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn

Beginning with Giorgio Agamben’s alignment of ethics and potentiality, this essay questions the ethical dimension of gesture in the field of dance as an eminently potentiality-bound art form. This draws on Daniel Sibony’s concept of law and dance, according to which the body simultaneously repels an...

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Main Author: Alexander Schwan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Performance Philosophy 2017-06-01
Series:Performance Philosophy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/168
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spelling doaj-8414ddba7f014ca285da34e94167a4192020-11-24T21:30:39ZengPerformance PhilosophyPerformance Philosophy2057-71762017-06-0131233910.21476/PP.2017.3116878Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted ShawnAlexander Schwan0Institute of Theater Studies, Freie Universität BerlinBeginning with Giorgio Agamben’s alignment of ethics and potentiality, this essay questions the ethical dimension of gesture in the field of dance as an eminently potentiality-bound art form. This draws on Daniel Sibony’s concept of law and dance, according to which the body simultaneously repels and longs for the law as a nexus of heteronomous structures. I frame this through a revision of Aby Warburg’s rhetorical concept, pathos formula, into the corollary term, ethos formula, as the encoded movement patterns of ethical attitudes or comportments which are motivated by decision-making rather than emotional content. Do gestures and their citation in dance bear an ethical dimension similar to the encoded transmission of emotions through movement? This new concept of ethos formula finds an excellent example in the work of the American choreographer Ted Shawn (1891–1972). His strikingly hybrid use of ethos formula from the 19th century Catholic theorist François Delsarte and his parallel practice of quoting liturgical gestures from Protestant church services, pursues the ambiguity and uncanniness of modernity itself. For Shawn—like many other protagonists of modernist dance—argues on the one hand for freeing the body from the boundaries of classical ballet in the name of individual expression, and on the other hand for an instrumentalized body that still clings to principles of taxonomy and normativity.https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/168AgambenethicspotentialityTed ShawnchoreographyDaniel Sibonylaw and dancemodernist dance
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alexander Schwan
spellingShingle Alexander Schwan
Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
Performance Philosophy
Agamben
ethics
potentiality
Ted Shawn
choreography
Daniel Sibony
law and dance
modernist dance
author_facet Alexander Schwan
author_sort Alexander Schwan
title Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
title_short Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
title_full Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
title_fullStr Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
title_full_unstemmed Ethos Formula: Liturgy and Rhetorics in the Work of Ted Shawn
title_sort ethos formula: liturgy and rhetorics in the work of ted shawn
publisher Performance Philosophy
series Performance Philosophy
issn 2057-7176
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Beginning with Giorgio Agamben’s alignment of ethics and potentiality, this essay questions the ethical dimension of gesture in the field of dance as an eminently potentiality-bound art form. This draws on Daniel Sibony’s concept of law and dance, according to which the body simultaneously repels and longs for the law as a nexus of heteronomous structures. I frame this through a revision of Aby Warburg’s rhetorical concept, pathos formula, into the corollary term, ethos formula, as the encoded movement patterns of ethical attitudes or comportments which are motivated by decision-making rather than emotional content. Do gestures and their citation in dance bear an ethical dimension similar to the encoded transmission of emotions through movement? This new concept of ethos formula finds an excellent example in the work of the American choreographer Ted Shawn (1891–1972). His strikingly hybrid use of ethos formula from the 19th century Catholic theorist François Delsarte and his parallel practice of quoting liturgical gestures from Protestant church services, pursues the ambiguity and uncanniness of modernity itself. For Shawn—like many other protagonists of modernist dance—argues on the one hand for freeing the body from the boundaries of classical ballet in the name of individual expression, and on the other hand for an instrumentalized body that still clings to principles of taxonomy and normativity.
topic Agamben
ethics
potentiality
Ted Shawn
choreography
Daniel Sibony
law and dance
modernist dance
url https://www.performancephilosophy.org/journal/article/view/168
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