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DANCE AT DENISON IS ABOUT EXPRESSING YOURSELF

We believe in creating artists/scholars who are informed citizens and responsible agents of change in a world where the moving arts are essential. To that end our students learn to become independent thinkers, to be resourceful and are encouraged to develop their personal aesthetic and artistic focus. As scholars they are required to engage in original research and learn to utilize the full set of resources available to dance scholars. The integration of embodied practices with scholarly inquiry is integral to our mission. Exposing students to the wide breadth of dance in the world, cutting edge and experimental, and from diverse cultures and perspectives is embedded in our curriculum and ideology. Former students are artists, teachers, performers, healers and scholars who understand the importance of community and citizenship.


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THE MISSION OF THE DEPARTMENT OF DANCE

The Department of Dance is committed to the liberal arts study of "dance as an art form" and the belief that such a study necessitates an integration of the kinesthetic (body), the intellectual (mind), and the emotional/internal (spirit). We see this trinity (body/mind/spirit) as the core concern of the discourse, the discipline and the department as we explore physical and metaphysical material both artistically and theoretically, exposing students to the principles of dance through the critical inquiries of movement practices and dance studies. We address these body/mind/spirit experiences as foundations for artistic, intellectual, and personal freedom.
 
Practically, we strive to balance breadth with depth in all aspects of our curriculum. To this end, each course blends physical and intellectual exploration. Early on in a student’s career, we encourage the application of critical research and concert performance, emphasizing the use of technology and supporting collaboration through interdisciplinary work. Ultimately, our aim is to develop competence in a wide variety of approaches.


  • Students will be able to achieve, minimally, an intermediate level of proficiency in a combination of various aspects of embodied movement practices.
  • Students will be able to demonstrate (factual) knowledge and (reflective and analytical) understanding of the languages, syntax, historical developments, and cultural significances of dance’s various bodily-kinesthetic forms.
  • Students will be able to select appropriately and employ various methods for describing, discerning, analyzing, labeling, and categorizing human movement.
  • Students will be able to use basic 21st century technology including digital equipment and software applications in order to access and document art work, and to use it appropriately to market or create within those media.
  • Students will be able to explore, shed limitations, reflect, and question within a process, and demonstrate their self-discoveries in independent and original theoretical and creative projects.