School: Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts

This unit information may be updated and amended immediately prior to semester. To ensure you have the correct outline, please check it again at the beginning of semester.

  • Unit Title

    Dance History and Analysis 2
  • Unit Code

    DAN2135
  • Year

    2018
  • Enrolment Period

    1
  • Version

    1
  • Nominal Hours

    72
  • Credit Points

    5
  • Full Year Unit

    Y
  • Mode of Delivery

    On Campus
  • Unit Coordinator

    Ms Susan Desley PEACOCK

Description

This unit involves a conceptual approach to dance performance/activities extending to ethnographical contexts. Its point of departure encompasses the fundamental components of movement, the body, time and space, in order to explore some of the potential knowledge/s generated through dance. The unit extends this enquiry to an initial survey of Australian and Asian dance practises with particular attention to ethnographical contexts, as well as to the particularities of commercial dance forms on film and stage. Emphasis is placed on the concepts in both written and oral formats.

Prerequisite Rule

Students must pass 1 unit from DAN1035

Equivalent Rule

Unit was previously coded AWD2206

Learning Outcomes

On completion of this unit students should be able to:

  1. Analyse selected dance repertoire with an increased conceptual acuity and descriptive facility.
  2. Demonstrate an increased breadth of contextual verbal and audio-visual knowledge of the issues surrounding dance.
  3. Demonstrate fundamental knowledge of the different perceptions of dance for Australian Aboriginal and Asian communities.
  4. Develop a critical approach to the ideas of dance and its works in relation to the social/cultural construction of body, space, time, gender, class and ethnicity.
  5. Engage with and offer innovative suggestions about the role of dance in the current socio-political environment.
  6. Express in both oral and written formats clarity of ideas and concepts.
  7. Show an appreciation of the place of popular genres in the development of western dance.

Unit Content

  1. Commercial entertainment from vaudeville and music halls to Broadway musicals and Hollywood films.
  2. Early modernism and dance artists' relationships with mechanisation and urbanisation.
  3. Expression of ideas and concepts in both written and oral formats.
  4. Social constructions of 'the body,' 'space' and 'time.'
  5. Socio/cultural contexts through studies of dance from world cultures: Aboriginal Australia, Japan, Cambodia, China, India, Korea and Indonesia.
  6. Terms and concepts such as modernism, postmodernism, binary construction, ethnocentricism, nationalism, multiculturalism and cross-culturalism against ideas of corporeality.
  7. The roles played by gender in dance.

Learning Experience

Students will attend on campus classes as well as engage in learning activities through ECU Blackboard.

JoondalupMount LawleySouth West (Bunbury)
Full YearNot Offered29 x 2 hour seminarNot Offered

For more information see the Semester Timetable

Additional Learning Experience Information

Seminars, Video analysis, Performance analysis and Independent study.

Assessment

GS1 GRADING SCHEMA 1 Used for standard coursework units

Students please note: The marks and grades received by students on assessments may be subject to further moderation. All marks and grades are to be considered provisional until endorsed by the relevant Board of Examiners.

ON CAMPUS
TypeDescriptionValue
PresentationSeminar presentation20%
PresentationSeminar presentation30%
Research PaperMajor research paper *50%

* Assessment item identified for English language proficiency


Disability Standards for Education (Commonwealth 2005)

For the purposes of considering a request for Reasonable Adjustments under the Disability Standards for Education (Commonwealth 2005), inherent requirements for this subject are articulated in the Unit Description, Learning Outcomes and Assessment Requirements of this entry. The University is dedicated to provide support to those with special requirements. Further details on the support for students with disabilities or medical conditions can be found at the Access and Inclusion website.

Academic Misconduct

Edith Cowan University has firm rules governing academic misconduct and there are substantial penalties that can be applied to students who are found in breach of these rules. Academic misconduct includes, but is not limited to:

  • plagiarism;
  • unauthorised collaboration;
  • cheating in examinations;
  • theft of other students' work;

Additionally, any material submitted for assessment purposes must be work that has not been submitted previously, by any person, for any other unit at ECU or elsewhere.

The ECU rules and policies governing all academic activities, including misconduct, can be accessed through the ECU website.

DAN2135|1|1

School: Western Australian Academy of Performing Arts

This unit information may be updated and amended immediately prior to semester. To ensure you have the correct outline, please check it again at the beginning of semester.

  • Unit Title

    Dance History and Analysis 2
  • Unit Code

    DAN2135
  • Year

    2018
  • Enrolment Period

    2
  • Version

    1
  • Nominal Hours

    72
  • Credit Points

    5
  • Full Year Unit

    Y
  • Mode of Delivery

    On Campus
  • Unit Coordinator

    Ms Susan Desley PEACOCK

Description

This unit involves a conceptual approach to dance performance/activities extending to ethnographical contexts. Its point of departure encompasses the fundamental components of movement, the body, time and space, in order to explore some of the potential knowledge/s generated through dance. The unit extends this enquiry to an initial survey of Australian and Asian dance practises with particular attention to ethnographical contexts, as well as to the particularities of commercial dance forms on film and stage. Emphasis is placed on the concepts in both written and oral formats.

Prerequisite Rule

Students must pass 1 unit from DAN1035

Equivalent Rule

Unit was previously coded AWD2206

Learning Outcomes

On completion of this unit students should be able to:

  1. Analyse selected dance repertoire with an increased conceptual acuity and descriptive facility.
  2. Demonstrate an increased breadth of contextual verbal and audio-visual knowledge of the issues surrounding dance.
  3. Demonstrate fundamental knowledge of the different perceptions of dance for Australian Aboriginal and Asian communities.
  4. Develop a critical approach to the ideas of dance and its works in relation to the social/cultural construction of body, space, time, gender, class and ethnicity.
  5. Engage with and offer innovative suggestions about the role of dance in the current socio-political environment.
  6. Express in both oral and written formats clarity of ideas and concepts.
  7. Show an appreciation of the place of popular genres in the development of western dance.

Unit Content

  1. Commercial entertainment from vaudeville and music halls to Broadway musicals and Hollywood films.
  2. Early modernism and dance artists' relationships with mechanisation and urbanisation.
  3. Expression of ideas and concepts in both written and oral formats.
  4. Social constructions of 'the body,' 'space' and 'time.'
  5. Socio/cultural contexts through studies of dance from world cultures: Aboriginal Australia, Japan, Cambodia, China, India, Korea and Indonesia.
  6. Terms and concepts such as modernism, postmodernism, binary construction, ethnocentricism, nationalism, multiculturalism and cross-culturalism against ideas of corporeality.
  7. The roles played by gender in dance.

Learning Experience

Students will attend on campus classes as well as engage in learning activities through ECU Blackboard.

JoondalupMount LawleySouth West (Bunbury)
Full YearNot Offered29 x 2 hour seminarNot Offered

For more information see the Semester Timetable

Additional Learning Experience Information

Seminars, Video analysis, Performance analysis and Independent study.

Assessment

GS1 GRADING SCHEMA 1 Used for standard coursework units

Students please note: The marks and grades received by students on assessments may be subject to further moderation. All marks and grades are to be considered provisional until endorsed by the relevant Board of Examiners.

ON CAMPUS
TypeDescriptionValue
PresentationSeminar presentation20%
PresentationSeminar presentation30%
Research PaperMajor research paper *50%

* Assessment item identified for English language proficiency


Disability Standards for Education (Commonwealth 2005)

For the purposes of considering a request for Reasonable Adjustments under the Disability Standards for Education (Commonwealth 2005), inherent requirements for this subject are articulated in the Unit Description, Learning Outcomes and Assessment Requirements of this entry. The University is dedicated to provide support to those with special requirements. Further details on the support for students with disabilities or medical conditions can be found at the Access and Inclusion website.

Academic Misconduct

Edith Cowan University has firm rules governing academic misconduct and there are substantial penalties that can be applied to students who are found in breach of these rules. Academic misconduct includes, but is not limited to:

  • plagiarism;
  • unauthorised collaboration;
  • cheating in examinations;
  • theft of other students' work;

Additionally, any material submitted for assessment purposes must be work that has not been submitted previously, by any person, for any other unit at ECU or elsewhere.

The ECU rules and policies governing all academic activities, including misconduct, can be accessed through the ECU website.

DAN2135|1|2