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The Analysis of Status of Using SNS among Domestic Dance Compaies : Focusing On Facebook
국내무용단체의 SNS활용 실태분석 : 페이스북을 중심으로
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2015.38.33Asian Dance Journal
Vol.38
pp.33-56
As a result of the spread of smart phone, the new communicational tool, SNS is used for diversity part of economy and culture. Among domestic dance compaies, SNS is used for marketing, communication tool for audience. This study aimed to research the domestic dance company’s SNS focusing on Facebook. For this Durpose, the research tools, acting respond indicators (‘Like’, ‘Share’, ‘reply’) were investigated and compared. As to know current state of the domestic dance company's SNS using, researcher could come up with apropriate SNS using tips for the future. In doing so, I selected 10 dance companies in a location of capital area and compared the kind of SNS and choosed 2 major dance companies that were good at SNS. Major research tool was SNS-Current Using State Investigation papers developed by the leading studies and the paper refered to domestic theses, books and academic journals, searching the internet. The suggestion of using the domestic dance company's SNS were as follows: First, the domestic dance company has to upload the latest news, involving beauty value that can give pleasure to Facebook users. And the quality of posting is important. Second, the domestic dance company's Facebook has to leads the Facebook users to reply or share their posting. Third, the domestic dance company's Facebook properly uses the funtion of uploading movies in Facebook.
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A Dance Analysis of Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Cinderella : Focused on Stepmother and Two Stepsisters through the Feminist View
장 크리스토프 마이요의 <신데렐라> 분석 : 여성주의 시각에서 본 계모와 두 자매
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2015.38.131Asian Dance Journal
Vol.38
pp.131-153
The purpose of this thesis is to interpret contemporary ballet work Cinderella via feminist perspectives. The effort of theoretician feminists affected feminism in the eighteen-century (18th). The Feminist movements showed new research about women’s dance, in particular to the changes in the understanding of woman's body movements and the interpretation of female dance. Furthermore, contemporary dance focused more on the feminist view. The literature review of this study found that various research studies accepted the effects of feminism on common arts and dance. Using Janet Adshed’s dance analysis methods, this study examined Jean-Christophe Maillot's contemporary ballet Cinderella focusing on the dance movement patterns of the wicked stepmother and two stepsisters. This study used the performance video to analyze the movement patterns in Maillot's Cinderella. On feminist viewpoints, firstly, the wicked stepmother and two stepsisters were not shy when they were looking at men. Their movements freely expressed their passions and feelings. Also, their acting displayed such the emotions as joy, sorrow, and anger without inhibition. Secondly, the movements of the wicked stepmother and two stepsisters showed passion and feminist feeling in their Pas de deux employing liberated movements of their chests. Accordingly, the wicked stepmother and two stepsisters had a strong liberal inclination. The relationship between Cinderella's father and the stepmother has control. The findings of this study suggest that Maillot's Cinderella be interpreted and understood in the realm of feminism and feminist theories.
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Performance Dance as Popular Culture during the Early Period of the Soviet Union
초기 소비에트 연방의 민중문화로서의 춤 공연예술 현상연구
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2015.39.117Asian Dance Journal
Vol.39
pp.117-140
This study examines the trends related to dance as a performance art during the early period of the Soviet Union, a time in which art was broadly used for public enlightenment, the promotion of socialist ideology, and national integration and establishment in the 1920s and 1930s. Dance in this period will be investigated with the aim of determining who produced and appreciated dance performance, the format and genre of the dance performances, and the themes and contents of the performances. Throughout the 1920s and 30s, efforts were made to develop a new form of art that would be appreciated and accepted by Soviet people from various social classes and would help to lead the newly born country, based on Lenin’s idea of popularizing art for the general public. It was a critical period that shaped the characteristics, format, and direction of performing arts in the Soviet Union. In looking at this period, three phenomena stand out. First, ordinary people emerged as both producers and viewers of the performing arts, and an amateur performing arts group (Soin Yesuldan) became popular. Second, Estrada and folk dance became popular during this period among the multi-ethnic and multi-cultural people of the Soviet Union, which greatly influenced the birth of a folk dance company with ballet choreographers. Third, at a meeting of the Pan-Soviet Writers Alliance held in 1934, Gor’kii M. declared that socialist realism should be the principle for creating Soviet art. Subsequently, young Soviet ballet masters developed new forms of ballet in which the themes and contents were in accord with the government agenda. Dance as a performing art in the early period of the Soviet Union greatly influenced not only the art movements in other socialist countries but also Minjok and Minjung chum in Korea in the 1980s and 1990s. In this regard, future research should investigate how dance formats and characteristics from the Soviet Union have been accommodated and reflected in Korean Minjok and Minjung chum.
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Semiotic Implication of the NYCB Commercial : Focused on the NYC Ballet's Young Patrons Circle
뉴욕시티발레단 광고의 기호학적 함의 : 뉴욕시티발레단 젊은 후원자의 하루(NYC Ballet's Young Patrons Circle)를 중심으로
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.44.255Asian Dance Journal
Vol.44
pp.255-274
The purpose of this study is to analyze the commercial “NYC Ballet's Young Patrons Circle” from the semiotic viewpoint. The commercial was produced by the New York City Ballet to recruit new young patrons and to draw the internet inherent meaning in the online commercial. The study is a qualitative study that used the precedent thesis, relevant books, and internet materials in literature research, and it analyzed the video secured from the official YouTube page of the New York City Ballet in the video analysis. This researcher studied the inherent ideology in the online commercial by applying the semiotic viewpoint of Roland Barthes.
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한국에서 발레 순수예술로 구축되는 역사에 대한 사회적 연구
A Study on the Socio-historical Construction of Ballet as Fine Art in Korea - focusing on its relationship with nationalism
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.45.9Asian Dance Journal
Vol.45
pp.9-40
This study investigates the historical process in which ballet in Korea was constructed as fine art. Particularly, it focuses on the ballet’s abrupt and conspicuous growth right after Korea’s liberation from Japan. By delving into materials of the period including newspapers, this study conducts a discourse analysis to inspect sociocultural meanings of ballet as fine art in Korea. In the early stage of its importation, ballet had several disadvantageous factors to be regarded as fine art. It had linked to aristocratic formality, which was condemned by modern artists. Ballet’s exotic toe dancing thrived in popular entertainments such as revue. A turning point came with Korea’s liberation occurring with the end of the Second World War (WWII) in 1945. The fact that ballet suddenly became important when the need for constructing a modern nation was urgent suggests the nation’s key role in the change. While the international society was restructured by the global norm of nationalism, nations functioned as the agent of culture construction. The nation’s leading role in it freed ballet from commercial arena and from past association with aristocracy. Ballet could claim disinterestedness and public welfare, which were at the core of fine art. For constructors of national culture, ballet was a useful means, since it provided a transnational form that subsumed locality. Also, as a form of tradition, ballet afforded a connection to antiquity which was imagined to be shared throughout the nation. Moreover, ballet’s classicism embodied elegance and order, which were desired during the postwar era. In conclusion, the process of national culture construction was a key for ballet in Korea to be constructed as fine art. Ballet as a national emblem represented the nation’s level of civilization in the international society and a public monument for the members of the nation.
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A Historical Study on the Full-Act Premiere of in Korea
<백조의 호수> 국내 전막 초연작에 대한 역사적 고찰
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.45.149Asian Dance Journal
Vol.45
pp.149-176
Korean ballet has made a great breakthrough both artistically and academically. However, most of the academic research have been conducted focusing on creative or modern ballet, lacking an attention to how a full-act premiere of a classical ballet was first formed. In this study, we aimed at ascertaining historical truth about how the first full-act premiere of
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A Study of Socialist Realism Represented in 20th Century Soviet Ballet
20세기 소비에트 발레 동향과 사회주의 리얼리즘 작품 연구
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2017.46.135Asian Dance Journal
Vol.46
pp.135-162
The purpose of this research is to examine the Soviet ballet in the 20th century in terms of socialist realism and to reappraise them. First, I focused on the conditions of ballet in the Soviet era after the October Revolution; how the classical ballet managed to survive; what kinds of works attempted by young choreographers like Goleizovsky and Lopukhov. Then, I investigated that how the Soviet ballet works represented socialist realism. Socialist realism had been the principle of creation during Soviet regime since 1934. It was not only an artistic style but also a propagandistic ideology that promoted the view of Soviet life. Socialist realism tried to show ought to be, such as an optimistic Socialist utopia not the real social problems. This trend was is based on Marxist-Leninist aesthetics. The fundamental principles of this aesthetics consisted of “nationality(narodnosti’)”, “class system(klassovosti’)” and “partizanship(partinosti’)”. I analyzed four Soviet ballets: The Red Poppy (by Glière and Tikhomirov), The Flames of Paris (by Asafiev and Vainonen), Romeo and Juliet (by Prokofiev and Lavrovsky) and Spartacus (by Khachaturian and Grigorovich). The Red Poppy was considered as the first Soviet ballet because it dealt with the theme of soviet “contemporary” life. The Flames of Paris was full of energetic and vivid character dances which symbolized “nationality (narodnosti’)” of soviet aesthetics. “Drambalet” in 1930s’ was the alternative name of the socialist realism ballet, and Romeo and Juliet was called as the genuine drambalet. Also, Spartacus was provided as the model of Soviet ballet. In conclusion, this study examined the way how socialist realism was reflected in the Soviet ballets. The aesthetic values other than the ideology were also interpreted. Finally, the further steps of study about the Soviet ballet in the 20th century can be developed on the ground of history and aesthetics.
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Historical Study on the Full-Act Premiere of Giselle in Korea
한국의 <지젤> 전막 초연작에 대한 역사적 고찰
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.49.107Asian Dance Journal
Vol.49
pp.107-129
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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Historicity in the Field of Ballet in Korean Society : Using Quantitative Content Analysis of Major Newspapers
부르디외 문화생산의 장이론으로 본 한국발레장의 역사성 : 1950년대 이후 신문기사의 양적 내용분석을 중심으로
DOI:10.26861/sddh.2018.51.099Asian Dance Journal
Vol.51
pp.99-123
Based on Pierre Bourdieu's theory of the field of cultural production, this paper focuses on historicity in the field of ballet in Korean Society. Using quantitative content analysis of major daily newspapers, this paper intends to examine the composition of artists' occupational groups and professional ballet careers, as a measure of autonomy in the field of ballet in Korean society. This study found that 1) since the 1980s, choreographers of ballet have attracted more attention than artists in other genres, and 2) while educational capitals is still a strong element, the autonomous hierarchy of a professional ballet career is emerging in the field of ballet in Korean society. In conclusion, it may be said that the field of ballet Korean society has strengthened in autonomy.
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A Study on the Choi Seung-hee’s National Dance Studio’s Concert Tour of the USSR in the 1956-57 and the Glocality of the Dance Works
1956-57년 국립 최승희 무용연구소의 소련 순회공연과 공연작품들의 글로컬리티 연구
DOI:https://doi.org/10.26861/sddh.2021.60.213Asian Dance Journal
Vol.60
pp.213-242
The purpose of this study can be divided into two. The first is to clarify the detailed schedule of the concert tour of the USSR, which was the last schedule of the Choi Seung-hee’s National Dance Studio, dispatched to the Eastern Europe tour in September 1956. This clarification includes an identification of the purpose, signification of this concert tour and the dance works. The second is to analyze the phenomenon of Choi Seung-hee’s glocality in her dance works based on the trends of her creation in the 1950s and the Soviet audiences’ reception of her works.
The Choi Seung-hee’s National Dance Studio held a concert tour of the Soviet Union for 44 days from November 30, 1956 to January 12, 1957. In this tour, the North Korean government had a political purpose to advocate North Korea's position among socialist countries and to strengthen the solidarity among them.
After Choi Seung-hee’s return to North Korea, in the form of her works she used the stagecraft of Soviet ballet for her choreographies of North Korean dance. And In the content and subject of her works, she pioneered the North Korean dance drama “North Korean Ballet”, which dealt with socialist patriotism and proletarian internationalism following socialist realism. In her other dance works, she portrayed the North Koreans’ wise, optimistic, and diligent lives and showed the model of North Korean socialists. Although foreign audiences’ reception was different, her artistry was recognized in Eastern Europe, including the USSR, and caused a great repercussion.
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