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Move like a practising bubble

journal contribution
posted on 2024-05-02, 01:57 authored by R Woodcock
Animation pedagogy often focuses on preparing students for work in the creative industries. As such, story and character development are emphasized over other possibilities of animation practice. However, I argue that movement – as a somatic practice – is fundamental to the task of teaching and learning animation. What better material to work with than the moving body with which we have all been practising since infancy? Yet movement is itself prone to fetishized imagery of hard-bodied frenetic motion that endangers its own body/bodies and habitats. This article explores the image of the soap bubble for thinking about the precarity of creative practice. To imagine the soap bubble as a practitioner of somaticity is to take on an ethics of the moving body that recognizes the precarity with which all bodies move while holding their form. I employ the inherent tensile ‘stretchiness’ of language to imagine what it would be to ‘move like a practising bubble’.

History

Journal

Journal of Dance and Somatic Practices

Volume

15

Pagination

23-36

Location

Bristol, Eng.

ISSN

1757-1871

eISSN

1757-188X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

1

Publisher

Intellect