Abstract

Stemming from one creative experience that emerged in London during the lockdown period of early 2020, called the “Emergency Festival”, this article is a result of observations based on practice, centred around the festival that a group of multicultural, interdisciplinary movement-based researchers and dancers created, curated, and participated in. It explores the possibility of making a radical alterity out of a hitherto previously established ideas of territory, time, and community, using performative writing as practice-based analysis scheme. Employing the concept of “communitas” by Victor Turner (1969) to approach the phenomenon of dance through distance, the article examines the importance of the emergence of collaboration as a way forward, epistemologically looking at dance as a method of creating and sustaining communities that are longing for a sense of home in times of change. The writing is divided into three parts, focussing on the aspects of space, time, and community, all the while embedded in the nature of movement and its effect on the practitioners, and onlookers, concluding with contemplation on the place of dance in varied mediums and the way forward to study it in a period of global disruption.

Highlights

  • María José Bejarano Salazar Costa Rica, 1987

  • As a community dance artist, she is currently developing Proyecto Colibrí – Acompañamiento Creativo, a Costa Rica-based initiative that aims for community development through community dance, ICH, and the research of corporeal tools for social change and sustainable development

  • With a masters in English literature and another in Dance Anthropology, her creativity is influenced by growing up in a multicultural, multilingual neighbourhood layered with complex everyday narratives of gendering, storytelling, and transgression

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Summary

Introduction

María José Bejarano Salazar Costa Rica, 1987. She has a degree in psychology and specialized in Dance Movement Therapy in Argentina. Performance art, installations, live streams, online classes, drawings, poetry, discussions, video-arts, songs, and rituals were birthed, these communal moments of creativity started consuming daily-life spaces and objects like duvets and blankets.

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