Going Nowhere: Screendance and the Time of Dying

This article considers a particular temporality—referred to as a state of moving stillness—within two different events: the screendance body that moves without appearing to get anywhere, and the dying body that moves but is not moving to anywhere. It focuses on Singing in the Rain (1952) directed by...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Anna Macdonald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Ohio State University Libraries 2017-06-01
Series:The International Journal of Screendance
Subjects:
Online Access:http://screendancejournal.org/article/view/5350
Description
Summary:This article considers a particular temporality—referred to as a state of moving stillness—within two different events: the screendance body that moves without appearing to get anywhere, and the dying body that moves but is not moving to anywhere. It focuses on Singing in the Rain (1952) directed by Kelly and Donen and a practice as research screendance project, made by the author, entitled Walk (2016). By placing events from art and life together here, alongside contemporary philosophies of temporality, the article works to illuminate something of the complex relationship between movement, time, and progression in each one, throwing light on the role that art, and screendance in particular, can play in our relationship to mortality.
ISSN:2154-6878