The Journal of Society for Dance Documentation & History

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Asian Dance Journal

Thinking Again about the work of SongBeom Art’s Propensity : Newspaper Data in the 1940s and 1970s

송범의 작품 연구에 대한 再考 : 1940~1970년대 신문 기록을 중심으로

Lee, Chanjoo 이찬주

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2016.40.9

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.40 pp.9-25

Abstract
Thinking Again about the work of SongBeom Art’s Propensity : Newspaper Data in the 1940s and 1970s ×

One modern dancer at the forefront of the art is SongBeom. Numerous studies have considered his life and work activities. However, an error exists, citing incorrect records. This research reconsiders the records of newspaper news organizations working on the agencies. SongBeom was established in the National Dance Company and played a major role in the 1962 writing style. Meanwhile, he demonstrated creative experimentation in Korean dance, helping to create a new framework. Paper records show that he entered the world of dance as an opportunity during a decisive time. He demonstrated endless enthusiasm for show. Not only can we check his newspaper records to clarify the title and year, we now can also consider his work and identify the notations. Performance on a performance advertising, unlike these days. Newspaper articles still contained some errors, but data are sound in terms of the work years. Even though he gross change in his microscopic, even if we approach Chuminsaeng can check the newspaper. It's a dance thing of a time of his activities through to become an opportunity to read the flow.

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A Study of New Women’s Femininity through Seung-hee Choi’s Dancing Body and Daily Life

최승희의 춤추는 몸과 일상에 나타난 근대 신여성의 여성성 연구

Hwang, Heejeong 황희정

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2016.43.197

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.43 pp.197-214

Abstract
A Study of New Women’s Femininity through Seung-hee Choi’s Dancing Body and Daily Life ×

This study seeks to interpret how femininity is revealed in Seung-hee Choi’s dancing body and how it was expressed in daily life at a time when patriarchy and the concept of the “new woman” collided. In early modern dance and in later works of Korean traditional material and Oriental images, we see aspects of bold, dignified women. These reveal a feminism that conforms to established male ideals and challenges classical femininity. In contrast, Seung-hee Choi practiced a progressive to her life and to marriage. The romantic relationship she shared with her husband was not like those of radical feminists. Instead, the couple forged a modern marriage that linked them as a mental partner and a mentor of life. The tendency of her work was also affected by her husband, so she created dance of proletarian tendency and then developed Korean dance. Seung-hee Choi succeeded at both her career and marriage. Seung-hee Choi was also a celebrity in her time for emphasizing femininity through her fashion. She retained her bob style hair and wore Western clothes indoors and out. The hats, coats, dresses, clutches, and shoes that she wore were carefully chosen to coordinate with the Art Déco style then in vogue in Paris and the U.S. This form of fashion reveals a graceful, sophisticated, and self-assured femininity.

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A Study of Choi Seung-hee throughthe Perspective of Globalism

글로컬리즘의 시각에서 바라본 최승희

Kim, Hoyoen 김호연

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.44.9

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.44 pp.9-26

Abstract
A Study of Choi Seung-hee throughthe Perspective of Globalism ×

This study traced Choi Seung-hee’s dancing career in Europe and the Americas between 1937 and 1940. Choi is recognized as a pioneer who built the foundation of modern Korean dance. Called “the dancer of the peninsular” and very popular in Korea and Japan, the celebrated dancer extended her career to Europe with the ambitious mission to introduce Joseon dance to an international audience in the late 1930s. As the Japanese novelist Yasunari Kawabata put it, her dance was powerful and based on her ethnic roots, which became representative of her as a dancer. Meanwhile, most Korean intellectuals criticized her dance for failing to fully express their nation’s identity; this was because it was a mix of Western-style and traditional Korean techniques. Despite this criticism, her dance proved itself to be fascinating enough to attract an international audience, presenting the uniqueness of an ethnic culture in a dignified and fresh way. It also suggested that the legendary dancer’s work carries significance in that it created a new value system with a blend of globalization, locality, and democratic elements.

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Choi Seung-hee (SAI SHOKI) : The Dancing Princess from the Peninsula in Mexico

최승희 : 멕시코에서 춤춘 반도의 무희

alfredo, 알프레도 로메로 카스틸라,김은희

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.44.65

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.44 pp.65-96

Abstract
Choi Seung-hee (SAI SHOKI) : The Dancing Princess from the Peninsula in Mexico ×

When I first looked through the records of Korean immigrants on the foreigner register in Mexico in 1989, a photo attracted my attention of a flapper-haired, smiling, beautiful woman who stood out among the others. She was Sai Shoki, a famed dancer who performed in Mexico City in October, 1940. When I met Judy Van Zile, professor of University of Hawaii in Puerto España in the summer of 2000, the professor told me that her study on Korean dance was nearly completed. Her study looked into the performance tour in America by Choi Seung-hee(Shoki’s Korean name)and included articles on her Bogota performance. That led me to the presentation of this study in which I was to give details about Shoki’s dance career, records on her Mexico performance, and her political position on her nation’s independence movement, which drove her to move to North Korea and continue her career there. The appendix contains related photos.

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Choi Seung-hee (SAI SHOKI) : The Dancing Princess from the Peninsula in Mexico ×
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PERFORMING MODERNITY IN KOREA : THE DANCE OF CH’OE SŬNG-HŬI—AN ADAPTED ESSAY

최승희의 춤에 나타난 한국의 근대성

Judy Van Zile, 주디 반자일,김은희

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.44.97

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.44 pp.97-132

Abstract
PERFORMING MODERNITY IN KOREA : THE DANCE OF CH’OE SŬNG-HŬI—AN ADAPTED ESSAY ×

Rooted in British sociologist Anthony Giddens’s description of modernity as a historical and cultural space that is “in various key respects discontinuous with the gamut of pre-modern cultures and ways of life”, this study seeks to contextualize Ch’oe Sŭng-hŭi’s life and legacy in relation to evolving ideas of modernity. Here I continue my concern with Ch’oe’s actual dancing. I first lay a foundation for moving forward by summarizing related previous findings. I then look at Ch’oe’s emerging aesthetic philosophy and artistic development in relation to modernity as it was becoming defined in dance in Japan, Korea, and elsewhere. I conclude that it was the diverse philosophies underlying the kids of dance with which Ch’oe became engaged that in effect gave her permission to develop artistically in the way she did, and that allowed for her changing embodiment of Korean modernity during the 1920s and 1930s.

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PERFORMING MODERNITY IN KOREA : THE DANCE OF CH’OE SŬNG-HŬI—AN ADAPTED ESSAY ×
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A Study on the Traditionality and Modernity of North Korean Dance : Focused on Dance articles of Joseon Art

북한춤의 전통성과 현대성에 관한 一考察 : 『 조선예술』의 무용기사를 중심으로

Kim, Chaewon 김채원

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.47.0123

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.47 pp.123-150

Abstract
A Study on the Traditionality and Modernity of North Korean Dance : Focused on Dance articles of Joseon Art ×

In this study, I examined how the succession and modernization of tradition has been emphasized through the articles related to dance in North Korea’s comprehensive art magazine Joseon Art focusing on its traditionality and modernity. The research method was centered on literature analysis and image analysis. In the literature, from the first issue of 1956 to the first of June 2000, 344 out of 468 articles were reviewed and analyzed. The analysis revealed that the majority of articles has focused on the discussion on the issue of inheriting and developing the people's dance heritage among the anti - revolutionary dance heritage and ethnic classical dance heritage. Based on socialist realism as a principle in succession and development, discourses in the articles have emphasized revolution in contents and have tried to create dance based on national characteristics in terms of form. I can see that the articles have strived to present the dance as a means of educating people’s ideology. The contents discussed in the Joseon Art from the 1950s to the 1970s were found to be further developed in the later period. North Korea has developed dance that promote the superiority of the Korean people based on Juche ideology. It was found that the principles related to dance decided before the 1980’s have continued in the “invariant law”.

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The Transmission Patterns of the Traditional Dance through the Pyeongyang Gisaeng School

평양기생학교를 통해 본 전통춤 전승 양상

Yun, Youngsuk,Kim, Hoyoen 윤영숙,김호연

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.48.4

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.48 pp.69-88

Abstract
The Transmission Patterns of the Traditional Dance through the Pyeongyang Gisaeng School ×

The purpose of this study was to investigate the various aspects of the traditional Korean dance at the Pyeongyang Gisaeng School and the ways that their culture was transmitted through their activities. There is no doubt that the perceptions of Gisaeng have been negative or narrow-minded. Furthermore, Gisaeng has become a symbolic image of sexuality, and the narrow-minded stereotype of Gisaeng still remains today. However, there exists counter-discourse that enables a re-conceptualization of Gisaeng as the symbol of a cultural archetype. It is also necessary to assess them as the pioneers of modern culture creation. The Pyeongyang Gisaeng School, in particular, produced many entertainers in the early modern days through a stable and sustainable educational system. The school provided whole person education based on its systematic process and content to produce a host of entertainers instead of limiting its scope only to art. Dance education was allocated to the upper grades so that the students could take on the practice of dance after equipping themselves with the basics including music. I The school also embraced contemporary art in its education according to the flow of the times rather than remaining at the level of the tradition. This foundation of the school contributed to the big number of Gisaengs from Pyeongyang recorded in Yedanilbaekin and Joseon Mi-In Bogam and the popularity they enjoyed among the public through their various performance activities.

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Historical Study on the Full-Act Premiere of Giselle in Korea

한국의 <지젤> 전막 초연작에 대한 역사적 고찰

Jang, So-Jung,Cho, Yun-La 장소정,조윤라

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.49.107

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.49 pp.107-129

Abstract
Historical Study on the Full-Act Premiere of Giselle in Korea ×

Giselle, along with Swan Lake, is one of the most widely-loved and frequently-performed classic piece of ballet. The first full-act premiere of Giselle in Korea was performed in December 10th of 1975 as the 17th period performance of the Korean National Ballet. Giselle, often considered to be an indispensable part of the repertoire in most professional ballet companies, has been said to be one of the most important pieces of classical ballet throughout the entire ballet history. The premiere performance of Giselle was a historic event which provided a steppingstone for the Korean ballet company to grow further into the next level. In this study, we aimed to ascertain historical truth about the first full-act premiere of Giselle in Korea and to draw historical implication. As research strategies, we collected and analyzed historical literature materials as well as conducted interviews with important figures. Our historical investigation indicated that the premiere of Giselle of 1975 triggered a significant leap toward a next level of performing art in general, not only of Korean ballet. Another important value could be found from its being a challenging attempt under the worst of conditions notwithstanding. In a similar vein, the premiere of Giselle had a particular significance due to its being the first independently performed full-act premiere without any help from outside the country. The first full-act premiere of Giselle was made possible due to the passionate devotion and inspiration of a few major figures

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전후 시기 포스트모던댄스에 나타난 민주적 성향에 관한 연구 - 즉흥작업을 중심으로 -

Chang, Jiwon 장지원

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.51.049

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.51 pp.49-64

Abstract
×

This study is aims to illuminate democratic tendency in Post-modern dance during the Postwar Era, especially focused on its political and social aspects. In the 20th century, especially during the sixties, the whole art of America under the counter-cultural environment was consisted mainly of radical idea and emphasis on the sprit of experiment. Intrigued by the opportunity that improvisation afforded to invoke an entirely unanticipated organization of things and events, experimental groups throughout the 1960s and the 1970s(Post-modern dance era) borrowed from jazz and its principles for composing in performance. To illuminate democratic inclination with improvisation shown in Post-modern dance, such as San Francisco Dancers Workshop, Judson Dance Theater, New York Chamber Dance Group, Workgroup, Grand Union, Contact Improvisation group. Post-modern dance era, dance groups allowed performers to share in a process of making work collectively, and many times this process extended to include the audience as well. At the same time that Post-modern groups appropriated for Asian and African identity, sex role to democratic tendency. As a result, in these group's dance, dancers applied improvisation to represent democratic thoughts and become aware of racial and sexual identity as well as the value of human body. Post-modern dance become more and more extended their ideas techniques and democratic inclination.

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A Study on Hijikata Tatsumi’s Ankoku Butoh (Dance of Darkness) by Analyzing Butoh Notation

부토보(舞踏譜) 분석을 통한 히지카타 타츠미의 암흑부토 연구

Lee, Jane 이재인

DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.51.149

Asian Dance Journal
Vol.51 pp.149-169

Abstract
A Study on Hijikata Tatsumi’s Ankoku Butoh (Dance of Darkness) by Analyzing Butoh Notation ×

This study aims at considering on Japanese postmodern dance, by researching Hijikata Tatsumi’s Ankoku Butoh, Dance of Darkness, which is known for most famous avant-garde dance of 1950s in Japan. Hijikata’s Butoh, started with Kinjiki in 1959, was an entirely new dance form having different qualities of expression from the other dances such as classic ballet and modern dance at that time of Japan. Mostly showing the experimental attempt on the stage by ordinary movement from the late 1950s to the early 1960s, Hijikata changed his performing style from his work in 1968, Hijikata Tatsumi and Japanese – Rebellion of Body. That means that Hijikata tried to make his own movement method. This study focuses on ‘Butoh notation’ as the principal reason of changing movement style of Butoh. By analyzing the existence of Butoh notations and contents of them, the research would figure out the actual relation between notation and creation of a new style.

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