Glorious Antinomies – Open-Level Improvisational Dance Practice

DAN2415.01
Course System Home Terms Spring 2027 Glorious Antinomies – Open-Level Improvisational Dance Practice

Course Description

Summary

To Do or Not To Do?
The decision itself is already a mystery.

Moments of choice are often ambiguous, unstable, and uncomfortable—yet full of possibility. This course approaches improvisation as a laboratory for investigating the emergence of movement, subjectivity, and choreography.

The question is not simply whether to act or not to act, but how movement, subjectivity, and choreography come into existence. Before intention becomes clear lies a fluctuating territory of ambiguity, hesitation, contradiction, and uncertainty. This course explores that territory.
Through the tension between embodiment and disembodiment, students investigate how actions emerge. Imagine standing in a dining hall unable to decide between a hamburger and a pizza—wanting both, yet unable to choose. This is a positive antinomy of embodiment. If both simply appear as menu items without any personal connection, they become a negative antinomy of disembodiment. When these states intertwine, a decision emerges. Choosing neither and simply walking away is also a form of emergence.

Throughout the semester, students engage in movement scores, partner practices, object-based explorations, memory compositions, instruction dances, collective improvisations, and choreographic experiments. Rather than learning a fixed vocabulary of movement, they investigate systems that generate movement under changing physical, perceptual, and social conditions.

Movement is understood not as the expression of a stable individual subject, but as something that arises through relationships among bodies, objects, perception, memory, space, and situation. Disembodiment is approached not as the absence of experience, but as a productive condition in which perception, action, memory, and identity no longer fully coincide. Within these gaps, unexpected possibilities arise and movement begins to take shape.

Drawing inspiration from William Forsythe, Yoko Ono, tea ceremony, renga, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker's Drumming, and the proposition "Objects May Be Freer Than We Are," students investigate multiple pathways through which movement, perception, and choreography emerge. Particular attention is given to unstable subjectivity, distributed agency, and the relationship between perception and action.
Improvisation is treated as an experimental field where decisions, accidents, and unexpected transitions continually reorganize relationships among bodies, objects, space, and time. Structured improvisations and open explorations cultivate spatial awareness, responsiveness, relational sensitivity, and the ability to remain within uncertainty.

Particular emphasis is placed on how individual experiences, perceptions, and actions enter into relation with one another, giving rise to temporary communities and collective choreographies.

This course is open to all levels.
By the end of the course, students will have developed practical improvisational tools together with a deeper capacity to perceive how movement, subjectivity, choreography, and temporary communities emerge through embodied experience—and perhaps come to recognize uncertainty not as something to overcome, but as a condition from which choreography can emerge.

Learning Outcomes

  • 1. Apply structured improvisation scores with increasing physical awareness, clarity, and responsiveness.
  • 2. Explore the dynamic relationship between embodiment and disembodiment as conditions for the emergence of movement.
  • 3. Develop spatial, relational, and collective awareness through collaborative improvisational practice.
  • 4. Generate original movement structures in response to sites, objects, language, and changing performative conditions.
  • 5. Create and present a self-directed improvisational composition that integrates conceptual inquiry with embodied experimentation.
  • 6. Reflect on improvisation as both an artistic practice and a process through which movement, perception, and subjectivity emerge.

Corequisites

Dance or Drama lab assignment if students sign up for 4 or more credits in designated dance course.

Instructor

  • Kota Yamazaki

Day and Time

TU,FR 4:10pm-6:00pm

Delivery Method

Fully in-person

Length of Course

Full Term

Academic Term

Spring 2027

Area of Study

Credits

2

Course Level

2000

Maximum Enrollment

16

Course Frequency

Once a year