The Ausdance Dame Peggy van Praagh Memorial Address
Delivered by Dr Peter Brinson to the Ausdance Ninth National Biennial conference and the Opening
of the Green Mill Dance Project Melbourne, 10 January 1993
The politics of dance—policy, process and practice
Madam President, my Lord Mayor, Miss
Dimmick, Professor Mackie, Dr van Praagh, Chairman, ladies and
gentlemen.
My first, very pleasant duty is to bring you greetings from Dance
UK, the national forum for dance in Britain and its Chair Bob
Lockyer, and from the Council for Dance Education and Training
(UK). These
two organisations hope to combine with others in 1993 to form
a National Dance Consortium representing, in the way Ausdance does
already, all dance interests in the UK. Our problems and possibilities
are very close to yours so we hope to move forward with you in
dialogue and exchange around the politics and role of dance in
our two countries.
There are other reasons why I am proud to be here. First, I am
proud, very proud, to hold honorary membership of Ausdance and
therefore to be the colleague of many dancers and dance teachers
here. It is one of the distinctions I treasure most- partly for
having shared in a very small way in the foundation of AADE—in this city, my lord mayor—16 years ago; partly also because of
my close friendship with Peggy van Praagh over much longer than
that. The third anniversary of her death occurs next Saturday.
She, in whose memory this address is given, was not only a principal
founder of what is now Ausdance. She has become twice a symbol.
By her all-embracing approach to dance, welcoming and recognising
all forms of dance in Australia, as she did in Britain, she helped
establish by example, and from her position of eminence, the
important principles of open access which are manifest in the
work of Ausdance.
Second, she remains a name of significance in British dance,
much mentioned in the media and in speeches during the successful
London
season of the Australian Ballet last year. Therefore she is a
symbol of the close relationship between British dance, Australian
dance
and their international connections. She it was, for example,
who first brought Rudolf Nureyev to Australia.
My third reason for pride in being here is that I have acquired
in visits to Australia since 1976, and from media watch in Dance
Australia and other sources, an immense and growing respect for
what Ausdance is achieving in national organisation. I see it
embracing all aspects of dance from performance to teaching;
from multicultural,
social and recreational dance to the advancement of dancers'
health. Above all, Ausdance focusses the cause and value of dance
as a
matter of concern for state governments and federal government.
This last achievement, still in its infancy, is central to any
politics of dance and was a continuing interest of Peggy van
Praagh. It is not known generally that as a comparatively young
dancers
in the 1930s she was prominent in drawing up the first Escher
contract for dancers on behalf of the dancers' union, Equity.
It was her
support for 'the Union and for dancers' organisation generally,
outside the function of directing Sadler's Wells Theatre Ballet,
which created a temporary rift between herself and Ninette de
Valois in the middle 1950s. As a result she left the Sadler's
Wells organisation
and became available in the early 1960s to accept an invitation
to serve dancers in Australia, actually on de Valois' recommendation.
Therefore it is especially appropriate that an address on the
new discipline of the politics of dance should be dedicated to
her.
I offer such a subject nervously before an audience which knows
its Australian politics far better than I. Therefore I have to
draw on my own experience of initiating this new discipline in
British higher education at the Laban Centre for Movement and
Dance in London; of advising dance policies in a number of countries
around the world, and of discussions with Peggy herself in Melbourne,
then colleagues and students at Armidale in 1976. I think one
should
acknowledge the facilitator of Armidale, the late Bernard James
in the University of New England. Without him there would have
been no choreographic workshops from which Ausdance could develop
its Green Mill enterprise.
A politics of dance must be practical. Therefore it must ask
and answer three questions. Why should there be a politics of
dance?
What political case for dance should dancers be advocating in
today's circumstances? What kind of political agenda should dancers
develop
to advance this case through the exercise of dance power? These
three questions form the structure of this Peggy van Praagh Memorial
Address in 1993.
Why a politics of dance?
For too long dance has been at the bottom of the heap in public
subsidy, in winning corporate sponsorship, in the priorities
of our education systems, in Arts Councils, even in public regard.
Yet dance is the oldest creation of human imagination and is
the
oldest art form along with music. Dance is part of the history
of human communication, human movement and human culture. Like
music, painting and sculpture it expresses those areas of human
experience which cannot be expressed in words. It does this with
a particular power because uniquely its instrument is the living
human body. As such it involves millions of people weekly in
its participation. Internationally it is the special expression
of
national physiques and temperaments, of the mysteries of Nature
which links us all, male and female, and of Nurture which makes
us different one people from another.
Notwithstanding the history and significance of dance, I can
tell you that in Britain dance receives in public subsidy less
than
half the monies given each year to drama and to music. British
students of drama and dance do not receive the automatic support
for vocational study given to students of art and music. That
is why we are developing a politics of dance. We have decided
enough
is enough. We have learned that if we are to end misunderstanding
and discrimination about dance we have to reverse the policies
which lie at the root of discrimination, working with other arts,
especially drama. I have noticed in the meetings of Ausdance
this weekend that you, like us, discuss how dancers can manage
better
while getting poorer. This is no way to proceed. We must learn
from France and other examples how to reorganise cultural power
to the benefit of dance. This means political action, political
persuasion.
Yet dancers draw back from this thought. "Politics," Margot Fonteyn once said to me, " is not our way. Dancing wins its own support." It does not. We must resolve two problems: political misunderstanding and public
prejudice. "Dancers," politicians have said to me, "cannot get their act together. Their brains are in their feet. They are always
squabbling. They don't know what they want." The misunderstanding between all artists and politicians is that artists create
alternatives. They do not conform. They disturb the status quo.
Their vision of society is different. It is their job to be different.
So, yes, dancers do upset politicians both in what they express
and what they need like properly equipped studios and decent
salaries. We dancers can remove this misunderstanding only by
presenting
such a thundering good case for dance, so well argued, we win
the political support we need. Dance advocacy is a central part
of
the politics of dance.
How do we remove public prejudice? The instrument of our art
is the human body. As such we touch the tenderest sensibilities
of
custom and irrational belief. For too long Anglo-Saxon tradition,
and much religious teaching the world over, has seen the body
as sinful, even irrelevant. Thus the French philosopher Descartes,
argued that since he had a clear and distinct idea of himself
as
a thinking non-extended thing, and, on the other hand, a distinct
idea, of his body as an extended non-thinking thing, it was certain
that he was truly distinct from his body and could exist without
it. This separation of mind and body in Western philosophical
tradition has much to do with the separation of dance from other
art forms
by 'respectable' society. It is contrary to everything for which
dance stands. We can remove such prejudice only with the help
of allies in public life, the media, other arts, education and
the
distinction of our own art.
A political case for dance
So to my second question. What political case for dance should
dancers be advocating in today's circumstances? The case must
be framed to win the maximum allies and be rooted in knowledge
which
demonstrates the value and values of dance. The old case for
dance, arguing its beauty, expression and nobility of movement
impresses
no one. The dance case today must be such that those with power
will be won to support dance because they respect it in the public
and national interest. Therefore the definition and presentation
of this case is the kernel of a politics of dance.
The case will vary from country to country but I offer six common
priorities. First, some acquaintance with political theory. Second,
a concern for the content of choreography and therefore the influence
of dance upon society. Third, emphasis on the value of dance
in blending cultural diversity. Fourth, convincing arguments
for the
presence of dance in education. Fifth, extending access to dance
by all means, especially work in communities to reach those who
are disadvantaged and those with disabilities. Sixth, a clear
political strategy rooted in dance power and in the development
of dance
advocacy through appropriate training.
Such are the needs of a politics of dance. They should be presented
and argued in a reasoned way supported by information from the
sort of strong data-base possessed already by Ausdance. The source
of advocacy needs to be an organisation truly and visibly representative
of the whole dance profession, possessed of dance power. In short,
Ausdance.
Political theory
Let us consider the detail of these six priorities. First, some
knowledge of political theory. In Australia as in Britain, dance
advocacy starts with the advantage of democratic traditions.
Who are the dance advocates? I hope they might be trained on a
course
in politics in Australia as in Britain. They might be dancers
at the end of performing careers, graduates from higher education,
graduates from vocational courses, writers, or even students
on
self-study. Whatever their origins they need to make reference
to the line of thinkers whose theories guide world liberal democracy.
I mean John Locke and Government by consent, Rousseau and the
General Will, Tom Paine and the Rights of Man, John Stuart Mill
and the
Liberty of the Individual, Marx and the challenge to capitalist
organisation, Antonio Gramsci and the alliance with artists and
intellectuals, Ghandi and the fight against colonialism—and
the example of many present-day advocates from liberation theology
in South America to the women's movement world wide, the gays and lesbians, the greens and the defenders of the Daintree
Rain Forest.
A common thread runs through these sources making them helpful
to dance study. Choreographers and dancers like journalists,
politicians and the rest of us need societies which encourage
free expression.
Therefore dancers need to be aware of this inheritance and the
arguments of those who fought for it. It follows that dance training
and education, whether for performance of dance teaching or the
new range of dance-related careers outside the theatre, should
involve some introduction to the democratic process.
Choreography and society
If this first priority of our politics of dance is fulfilled
it seems certain that the second priority will be fulfilled in
consequence.
A broader education for dancers during training, including introduction
to social and political concerns, must influence the content
of choreography in the direction of these concerns. Already this
trend
is manifest in the work of some choreographers. I think of the
choreography of Kenneth MacMillan, Jerome Robbins, Christopher
Bruce, Lloyd Newson and others in Europe and the USA. They have
their Australian counterparts. I am not saying that dance and
choreography are vehicles for cosmic statements or political creeds.
Plainly
they are not, as Doris Humphrey pointed out long ago. I am saying
that, like it or not, choreographers respond to the climate of
their times. Therefore the post-modernist trend of dancing for
dancing's sake, manifest especially in the choreography of Cunningham,
Alston and their followers, reflected a period beginning with
liberation in the 1960s but ending today with dance turning in on itself.
Since 1989 we have begun to experience a different historical period
with different choreographic responses. The Cunningham period,
however, has given us the liberation of dance as an art independent
of other arts and a clearer recognition that kinesthetic communication
is central to dance communication.
Today, in Australia choreographers need to answer the question
Shirley McKechnie asked in her memorial address two years ago. "What is Australian choreography?" I am sure Australian choreography is not dancing for dancing's sake, nor does
it draw its sources only from Europe and the USA. Rather it looks
to Australian daily life, the great Australian landscape which
shapes imagination, the ever-present Aboriginal landscape which
shapes imagination, the ever-present Aboriginal culture and its
implications, the diversity of Australian's many other cultures,
and the tradition of Gertrude Bodenwieser. All this is of consequence
in a politics of dance. Whatever the influences, however, the
great function of dance in any society remains to explore and
reveal
through movement, non-verbally and therefore cross-culturally
and internationally, those aspects of human experience which
cannot
be expressed in words.
What communication, then, should the Australian Ballet, Australian
Dance Theatre, Queensland Ballet, the West Australian Ballet,
the Sydney Dance Company and other companies offer their Australian
audiences? What dialogue—whether of fun and recreation or illumination
of relationships—should Dance North have in common with communities
across the spaces and heat of North Queensland, or the Chrissie
Parrott Dance collective evoke in the infinity of Western Australia,
areas the size of European nations? What power—in the end a
political
power—lies in the network of dance projects, residencies, creative
development enterprises, conferences and dance writing funded
by arts councils, local authorities, governments and corporate
sponsors?
Collectively they comprise a network of diverse dance origins,
initiatives, sacrifices and cultures to make one Australian dance
culture.
From such an evolution, reaching back to Armidale and beyond,
what will be the response of choreographers, here at Green Mill
in the
next two weeks, to shape the future of their art in an Australian
and Pacific context? This is a political question because Australian
choreography embraces now the Indian traditions of Tara Raj Kumar,
the aboriginal inheritance of Australia's first inhabitants and
the diverse cultures of new Australians from south-east Asia
and the Pacific islands, all warmed by the same Australian sun.
Cultural diversity
The reality of Australian dance culture is as diverse and multicultural
today as our dance culture has become in Britain, or as dance
cultures are becoming in Europe. Thirteen million people, approaching
the
population of Australia, live in Europe, with origins which are
outside Europe. They will not go away. They bring with them,
as new people have brought to Australia, new insights about those
areas of human experience which can be expressed through human
movement and human nurture. A part of our advocacy to politicians
should be to make them understand that dance can make a significant
contribution—no, is essential—to resolve the problems of
multiculturalism
in political, educational and cultural national life.
What might be the end result of this dance contribution? In what
way might an Australian dance culture emerge from Green Mill,
from future Green Mills, and from the grand sweep of choreographic
ventures
in all dance styles across the Australian continent? Working
with artists from allied disciplines I believe the influence
which choreographers
can exert internationally upon society is far beyond what they
anticipate today. It is nothing less than to help redirect the
psyche, thinking and fixed assumptions of peoples of the world
towards building the new kinds of culturally diverse nationhood
which will characterise the next millenium in a new kind of polis.
This is not fanciful thinking. It is practical deduction from
the changing structures of all nations and the growth of intercommunication.
For success, for the creation of harmony rather than racial or
communal confrontation, we need an alliance among artists, politicians
and educators. This is the third priority of our case to politicians.
Dance and education
The fourth priority is advocacy for dance in education. Education
is a key element of our political strategy alongside the realisation
of dance power. Education we must win. Within education lies
the aesthetic dimension of curricular in schools and higher education.
Within higher education dance is changing traditional notions
of
the nature of knowledge by extending our understanding of non-verbal
knowledge, knowledge transmitted without the help of words and
numbers.
Within all education the argument for an aesthetic dimension
rests on a view that the uniqueness of human existence consists,
above
all, in our capacity to appraise and communicate with each other
about our various experiences of the world. We do this in many
different ways, through many different modes of understanding
and communication, not just in words and numbers.
The aesthetic dimension explores the way our ideas of beauty,
harmony, grace, balance, harshness, stridency and ugliness are
conceive,
formulated and expressed. It is the preparation for much of the
quality of life. Not to include this dimension in education is
to short-change young people for life. Yet it is given cursory
attention in many schools. Often the arts are excluded from the
regular curriculum or marginalised by those who control educational.
Dance is part of this aesthetic dimension. To exclude dance is
to exclude an art which synthesises an important range of experiences
for young people. These include a physical dimension through
developing awareness of the body's emotional, expressive and
physical possibilities.
They include a psychological dimension from confidence gained
in physical expression and control. They include a community
and multi-cultural
dimension bringing young people together in joint creative work.
They include aesthetic practice requiring decisions concerning
music, colour, costume and choreography. Finally there is a careers
dimension for those who wish to be dancers. Few subjects are
so rich in the gifts they give young people.
More than this. Dance adds also to our knowledge of the world
and ourselves. In establishing its place in Higher Education
dance
has had to show, and has shown, that choreography includes research
and that the inclusion of dance extends the concept of knowledge
beyond that associated traditionally with words and numbers.
Alongside music and art, dance, as I have said, conveys knowledge
of that
area of human experience which cannot be expressed in words;
the wide range of emotion, feeling, sensibility, creativity,
and values;
the nature and nurture of our bodies. With this goes exploration
of cultures of the past and present, communication, appreciation
of the arts; and development of imagination. No matter how much
oil or sheep a nation may possess its wealth lies principally
in the imagination of its people. The arts, including dance,
are trainers
of imagination and therefore creators of wealth. Politicians
ignore at their peril this economic, cultural and moral resource.
Education is changing also the nature of dance and its imaginative
contribution to society. Throughout the dance world dancers are
emerging no longer only from traditional training centres. Especially
they are emerging from higher educational The presence of such
dancers is manifest strongly in the structure and services of
Ausdance and in the organisation of Green Mill. This phenomenon
can be matched
in Britain and elsewhere. As a result dancers and choreographers
from these sources have broader perspectives, wider awareness
of the world outside studio and theatre walls, a new sense of
responsibility
to society, new ideas of what dance might do for communities
and of the influence they, as dancers, should be exerting on
Arts Councils,
arts administrators and politicians locally and nationally. These
new dancers are anxious to assert themselves, do their own thing,
are less willing to be buried in large companies. In Britain
such attitudes already are shaking the policies of our two largest
contemporary dance companies and are affecting the structures and audiences for dance across
the country.
In dance education and training teachers and dance companies
are forming organisations to exert political pressure to defend
and
advance the place of dance in British society. Dancers themselves
have produced a dancers' charter for health and welfare. I have
it here to show you. It is something impossible to conceive five
years ago. I find similar development in Australia, through clearer
and more dramatic in its affect. In both countires I perceive
a breakdown of the distinction between professionals and amateurs.
What is an amateur? Very often a professional who is not paid.
What is ethnic? Are American films ethnic because they are from
America? Or Russian ballet ethnic because it comes from Russia?
In a growing global culture national qualities are essential
but
ethnic distinctions are a threat. There are strong Australian
qualities but ethnic rivalries are overcome in the Latin-American
dances
of Strictly Ballroom now showing to 4X applause world wide. Britons
wouldn't give an XXXX for any other film. To us its attraction lies in its dancing, its Australian setting,
its challenge to an over-powerful dance federation—and its
central theme of an integrity not for sale.
Access to dance
This raises the crucial issue of access to dance in the community,
our fifth priority. The health of dance in society is related
intimately to the health of communities. All societies, even capitalist
ones,
depend on community ties. Community ties are public goods which
the competitive free market cannot supply, but can destroy, as
indeed Thatcherism in Britain has destroyed much caring and community
spirit. Arising equally out of dance companies, vocational dance
training and higher education, a new profession of dance animateurs
is emerging to work in communities. They exert in Britain an
increasing political affect. Dance animateurs are concerned to
make dance
available to the widest sections of the population, to liaise
with touring dance companies so that the impact of those companies
remains
and can be developed after the companies have moved on. Their
mission is to empower people and communities by developing dance
creativity.
Therefore they are concerned with dance access in all its implications. At the end of the day all our efforts are wasted if people do not respond
to dance language. The principal answer to this problem lies
in dance as a part of education. Some of the answer lies also
within
dance itself. Choreographers should be more conscious of the
audiences for whom they create. Dance animateurs, wherever they
work, (we
have 150 of them in Britain), should seek out and serve local
needs in their dance activity. Dance in communities, after all,
is dance
plus caring. All these examples of access—in education, in
choreographic concern for audiences, in dance animation—are
manifestations
of the potential power and influence of dance.
Dance power
Dance power, then, our sixth priority, is concerned with moral
issues as well as political, economic and cultural issues—the
right to a distinctive culture, freedom of expression, links
with other arts and generosity to fellow artists working in partnership,
the integrity of dance and its artist. Integrity, as I said,
is
not for sale. It follows that dance power has several images.
The first people with whom it should be concerned are dancers
themselves.
Too often in the hierarchy of power we see ourselves below every
one else. This must be changed. We can make the change through
the success and competence of the case for dance we present in
the five priorities I have outlined. That way we shall realise
dance power and understand the nature of that power.
Essentially dance power in its widest conception emerges from
the collective voice of the whole dance world, what Jean-Jacques
Rousseau,
one of the political theorists I mentioned at the beginning,
called the General Will. It is why we need to study political
theorists.
The first step towards realising dance power is the creation
of a national body such as Ausdance to realise and help formulate
the general dance will. Coupled with this needs to be a difinition
of dance power itself. For this it is helpful to draw on sociological,
philosophical and political identifications of power in general.
In doing this Ausdance can be seen to be a demonstration of voluntary
activity through what is known in politics as a secondary association.
Secondary associations are essential organisations in a democracy,
intermediate between individual or firms and the institutions
of
state and the electoral system. Their function is to help shape
the political agenda, determine choices, influence opinion and,
above all, conduct an advocacy which persuades the electorate.
The great achievement for Australian dance in 1977 was the creation
of such a secondary association for dance. Its authority is the
general will of dance people.
What kind of power are we discussing? Does not power in the dance
world concentrate too much at the top end of schools and companies
or in Arts Councils with too little consultation and sharing
of power further down? In the exercise of power do we not have
to
distinguish between the power of persuasion, influence and manipulation
as against direct coercion and authority? Who exists to arbitrate
between conflicts of power in ways which bring about consensus
rather than dictation in the pursuit of interest? We need to
find answers because for too long the dance world has been riven
by
conflict between dance style against dance style, teacher against
teacher, company against company in a competition for inadequate
resources, students and public opinion. The result is to weaken
the impact of dance power on the outside world. The role of a
dancers' organisation, of Ausdance, therefore, is to identify
common interests
for its whole dance world leading to the possibility of collective
action, collective organisation and mobilisation of a collective public opinion in favour of dance. Such
a role is implicit in the aims of Ausdance listed in its brochures.
There are wider issues, however, associated with the experience
of dance power. Gender bids, for example, involving the interests
of women and, in Britain certainly, equal opportunities in schools
for boys to dance as well as girls; the interests of immigrants
and their dance cultures alongside dance cultures of the host
society; the contribution of dance to articulate and enrich the
lives of
sections of the population such as elderly people, people with
disabilities and young people, especially teenagers, through
the concept of youth dance; the role of dance in sustaining communities;
and the working conditions of dancers themselves. In Britain
one
third of professional dancers live at levels below the official
poverty line. Is it not much the same in Australia? We can change
matters only by winning the support of the electorate.
These issues are part of the politics of dance because dance
power includes the power of dance to affect the bodies, minds
and emotions
of those who see dance and practice dance. Therefore a central
element of dance power is dance art itself, that power of emotion,
of uplife, insight, sorrow and joy through movement which dancers
and dance companies transmit to audiences. It is a power which
contributes ultimately to the national quality of life. I justifies
every cent of the $400 000 cost of Green Mill to explore and
develop choreography appropriate to Australia.
A further element of dance power, then, has to do with the influential
power, lobby power, the organised power exerted collectively
by the whole dance community of dancers, teachers, students,
administrators,
academics, writers, researchers, the lot. It is the most controversial
element of power, and, in my experience, must involve direct
contact with politicians. It is not enough to deal only with
Arts Councils
and senior officials in Ministries. The appeal, the impact, the
transmission of information and influence must reach politicians
and Ministers themselves who rarely understand the structures
of the arts. This requires special literature for members of
Parliament
and local councils, the identification of individual politicians
who might be allies, or powerful antagonists, for dance, the
constant endless search for other allies and their mobilisation
in the media,
in business, in academic circles, professional bodies, labour
unions—anywhere, everywhere, especially at election time.
Politician need passion and conviction in politics, but wonder
too at the creativity and richness which human beings have within
them. Part of any lobby of politicians must be to turn this passion,
conviction and wonder into action at election time. I have here
a document which is part of such action and is unique. It is
called Dance, Our Cultural Future. published by the British Labour
Party,
the only time anywhere in the world a major political party has
developed a dance policy as part of its appeal to the electorate.
The policy earlier this year was a result of lobbying. It was
reflected in the election by more attention than ever before
to dance needs
on doorsteps and in debates across the whole political spectrum.
It can be done!
Let me summarise. Once, when I was leaving Australia I flew over
its centre, over the red soil, over Ayers Rock and I imagined
myself standing there as night fell. (lights lowered) As I stood
I heard
the click, click of sticks from the Aboriginal owners of this
land as they began to dance, summoning other dancers to join
them. I
heard it from the north and west and south. Then I heard new
sounds of the forces of all Australia's cultures being marshalled
on behalf
of dance. Out in front I saw reconnaissance groups and clubs
of young people in discos and youth dance companies and schools
probing,
inventing, exploring—thousands of them with their music. In
alliance were other companies of dancers in music shows, films
and television,
reducing resistance to dance and winning allies. In support were
federations of ballroom dancers, massed and raising everywhere
the banner of dance. I heard the sound of audience applause.
I looked again in the darkness to see networks of small companies
of diverse cultures travelling the wide space s of Australia,
visiting communities like flying doctors, because dancers are
doctors of
the heart and soul. I saw bigger companies of dancers in the
cities, changing qualities of Australian life through the vision
of programmes
raising the consciousness of audiences.
I heard a sound like rain which was the richness of dance from
other lands mingling in Australia to nourish Australia's dance
culture, and the sound of children's voices from schools where
minds and bodies are educated in proper balance.
Through the darkness I saw shafts of light from dance projects
and occasional ventures illuminating unsuspected corners of dance
life. And a great flow which was Green Mill! Behind it I could
see the high centre of this enterprise working with leading dance
organisations—Ausdance—coordinating communication, raising
money, lobbying support from the media, Parliament, councils,
politician.
In the dark the clicks of aboriginal dance faded. The sun shone.
(lights up). I saw a different Australia. There! (indicating
audience) I heard a new sound—politicians and administrators
hurrying with
money, resources, support, praise!!
A vision from the Dreamtime, perhaps but possible if only we
became conscious of the strength of our subtle, mysterious and
too silent
art.
So dancers! Walk tall! Exert the power you have! Dame Peggy would
approve.
Notes
- This abbreviation of Descartes' view of mind and body is drawn
from his Discourse on Method (1673) and Meditations (1642). They
comprise his cogitoy ('I think,
therefore I am'; (cogito ergo sum)), brilliantly summarised in Bertrand Russell's
History of Western Philisophy, Second edition (1961) Unwin, London p 547
- Doris Humphrey (1959) The Art of Making Dances. New York pp 34-41
Caloust Gulbenkian foundation (1982-89): The Arts in Schools. Gulbenkian Foundation,
London. This now famous report presents the arguments for aesthetic education
as central to the curriculum.
Dance UK (1992): A Dancer's Charter for health & welfare. Dance UK, 9 Rossdale Road, London SW15 1AD. England
The role of secondary associations in democratic governance today is discussed
Politics and Society, volume 20, number 4, December 1992. Sage Publications
Inc, 2455 Teller Road, Newbury Park, CA 91320. USA
Lobour Party (1992): Dance, Our Cultural Future. Labour Party, 150 Walworth
Road, London SE17, England
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