Dance
Definition/Scope Note:
the movement of the body in a rhythmic way, usually to music and within a given space, for the purpose of expressing an idea or emotion, releasing energy, or simply taking delight in the movement itself.
Related Terms:
- Dance
- Interpretative
- Expression
- Rhythm
- Music
Website/Online Sources:
Journal Articles:
- Traditional Dances as a Means of Teaching Social Skills To Elementary School Students/ Grigorios Masadis
- The Effect of the Traditional Dance Program on Health Related Quality of Life as Perceived By Primary school Students/ Lykesas Gregorios
- Feasibility of a Dance and Exercise with Music Programme on Adult with Intellectual Disability/ Martinez Aldao
- Relational creativity and improvisation in contemporary dance/ James Leach
- Contribution of Dance Studies from the point of view religious Dance Teachers in Formal Education/ Talia Perslhtein
eBooks:
- History of Dance/ Dailey Diane
- Jazz Dance: A History of the Roots and Branches/ Wendy Oliver
- Dance Team/ Simon Charnan
- Street Dance/ Liz Gogerly
- Mythology of Dance/ Harry Eiss
Odilo:
- Dance/ Barbara Steiner
- Ballroom Dance/ Wendy Hinote Lanier
- Conversation on a Dance with Dragons/ George A.A. Martin/ Daily Books
- Rhythm, Music, and Education/ Dalcroze
- Drumming to the different Marchers Finding the Rhythm For Differentiated Learning/ Debbie Silver
Proquest:
- Hair testing to assess both known and unknown use of drug amongst ecstasy user in the electronic dance music scene/ Joseph J. Palamar
- Writing Dancing in the Age of Postmodernism/ Done into Dance: Isadora Duncan in America/ Gendering Bodies/ Performing Art: Dance and Literature in Early Twentieth Century British Culture/ Moving Words: Re-writing Dance/ Bodies of the Text: Dance as Theory, Literature as Dance/ Beth Cleary
- Dance in the Field: Theory, Methods and Issues in Dance Ethnography/ Securing our Dance Heritage: Issues in the Documentation and Preservation of Dance/ Catherine Foley
- Dance to read or Dance to Dance/ Thomas Hagood
- Dancing Machines: Dance Dance Revolution, Cybernetic Dance, and Musical Taste/ Joanna Demers