WRITING
GUIDE FOR DANCE
Watching the Dance |
Organizing Your Ideas | Outlining |
Writing
People usually
go to a dance for entertainment and leave with more of an emotional response
than a coherent analysis or interpretation. Emotional response is important, but
to write a dance paper you must make observations about the specific form and content of
the dance.
What do you
pay attention to and how do you remember it later? The first step is to
think about your response to the work: look at how you feel, what has made
you feel that way, and why...
Watching
the Dance
Think about
what you are seeing. Compare works to each other, and talk about them with
other people. The more something stays on your
mind, the easier it will be to write about it.
Take notes.
You can do this even for just a short section of the piece. Write down any little
details you notice. Notes are important resources for the writing
process, especially when you are removed from the source.
The important
thing to grasp and remember is the form of the dance. Look at and record
the events of the dance. Write down the order of movements. Describe phrases
in terms of the shape and quality of the movement. Describe the mood: music,
lighting, costume, the general atmosphere. Identify the style -- if this
the dance looks like a style that you recognize (i.e. ballet), then
take notes on what characterizes that style. Notice contrasts. Write down
any words that come to your mind while watching. Associations that you
make with the dance, or just what it reminds you of, usually become the
basis for a paper.
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Organizing
Your Ideas
Work with your
notes to see how well they fit together, looking for patterns or contradictions.
Try to solidify your impression of the piece. The more you work on these
ideas, the more material you will have to develop. Eventually you will
need to choose a manageable topic. You can't talk about everything,
so you should choose a theme appropriate to the paper length. For dance
papers this may mean ignoring much of what you saw.
Make a sequential
outline of the events of the dance: list the order of movement phrases,
the changes in mood (music or lighting), and the changes in style throughout
the piece.
Review your general
impression of the dance, considering the words you associated with the dance and
the dance's sequence of events.
This is called "reading" a dance, and is analogous to a "reading" of a
book. Trust your instincts on a dance: you don't need to be an expert to
get a feeling about a dance. Ambiguous readings are fine, they even give
you more to talk about.
Come up with
specific examples from the dance which illustrate your reading, or relate
your reading to the experience of dancing in your class.
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Outlining
This is the
road-map for your paper: you don't necessarily have to follow it but it
is helpful to have as much information as possible in front of you while
you are writing. This is the best place to really figure out how you are
going to describe or prove your point. List your concepts and the examples
which help to illustrate them. Summarize each main idea in one sentence
and then list the things that prove it underneath. Order your ideas so
they make sense. Usually you can establish some flow between them which
relates back to your main point. This doesn't have to be in any particular
form, just enough so you can follow the order of ideas while you are writing.
Write everything in the plainest language possible, to make sure your ideas
are clear -- you can get fancy later.
You can talk
separately about different elements of the dance, such as style or mood,
and then discuss how they worked together to create a theme or you can
take certain events in the dance and discuss how they each occurred, and
how they fit together to create meaning.
Mold each idea
around your general feeling for the dance: if it was totally wacky then
talk about the wacky music, lighting, costumes, etc. If the movement of
the wacky dance reminded you of cars driving on the highway, then use examples
of movement shapes or phrases to describe that.
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Writing
This is always the hardest part but you can cut down on
your work at the computer considerably by outlining. Sit down with your outline
and just start writing out your ideas. Don't worry at first about making
everything flow perfectly.
The most important thing to do is give yourself a
decent amount of time to write, so you don't get too stressed out. Stick with it
until your ideas are expressed. If this doesn't come easily at first, you can
always return and revise. Don't get discouraged and talk to your teachers if you
get hung up.
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