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Books > Arts & Architecture > Music > General
In Landscape of the Now, author Kent De Spain takes readers on a
deep journey into the underlying processes and structures of
postmodern movement improvisation. Based on a series of interviews
with master teachers who have developed unique approaches that are
taught around the world - Steve Paxton, Simone Forti, Lisa Nelson,
Deborah Hay, Nancy Stark Smith, Barbara Dilley, Anna Halprin, and
Ruth Zaporah - this book offers the rare opportunity to find some
clarity in what is often a complex and confusing experience. After
more than 20 years of research, De Spain has created an extensive
list of questions that explore issues that arise for the improviser
in practice and performance as well as resources that influence
movements and choices. Answers to these questions are placed side
by side to create dialog and depth of understanding, and to see the
range of possible approaches experienced improvisers might explore.
In its nineteen chapters, Landscape of the Now delves into issues
like the influence of an audience on an improviser's choices or how
performers "track" and use their experience of the moment. The book
also looks at the role of cognitive skills, memory, space, emotion,
and the senses. One chapter offers a rare opportunity for an honest
discussion of the role of various forms of spirituality in what is
seen as a secular dance form. Whether read from cover to cover or
pulled apart and explored a subject at a time, Landscape of the Now
offers the reader a kind of map into the mysterious realm of human
creativity, and the wisdom and experience of artists who have spent
a lifetime exploring it.
Amidst the growing forums of kinky Jews, orthodox drag queens, and
Jewish geisha girls, we find today's sexy Jewess in a host of
reflexive plays with sexed-up self-display. A social phantasm with
real legs, she moves boldly between neo-burlesque striptease,
comedy television, ballet movies, and progressive porn to construct
the 21st Century Jewish American woman through charisma and comic
craft, in-your-face antics, and offensive charm. Her image
redresses longstanding stereotypes of the hag, the Jewish mother,
and Jewish American princess that have demeaned the Jewish woman as
overly demanding, inappropriate, and unattractive across the 20th
century, even as Jews assimilated into the American mainstream. But
why does "sexy" work to update tropes of the Jewish woman? And how
does sex link to humor in order for this update to work? Entangling
questions of sexiness to race, gender, and class, The Case of the
Sexy Jewess frames an embodied joke-work genre that is most often,
but not always meant to be funny. In a contemporary period after
the thrusts of assimilation and women's liberation movements,
performances usher in new versions of old scripts with ranging
consequences. At the core is the recuperative performance of
identity through impersonation, and the question of its radical or
conservative potential. Appropriating, re-appropriating, and
mis-appropriating identity material within and beyond their midst,
Sexy Jewess artists play up the failed logic of representation by
mocking identity categories altogether. They act as comic
chameleons, morphing between margin and center in countless number
of charged caricatures. Embodying ethnic and gender positions as
always already on the edge while ever more in the middle,
contemporary Jewish female performers extend a comic tradition in
new contexts, mobilizing progressive discourses from positions of
newfound race and gender privilege.
Testing Hearing: The Making of Modern Aurality argues that the
modern cultural practices of hearing and testing have emerged from
a long interrelationship. Since the early nineteenth century,
auditory test tools (whether organ pipes or electronic tone
generators) and the results of hearing tests have fed back into
instrument calibration, human training, architecture, and the
creation of new musical sounds. Hearing tests received a further
boost around 1900 as a result of injury compensation laws and state
and professional demands for aptitude testing in schools,
conservatories, the military, and other fields. Applied at large
scale, tests of seemingly small measure-of auditory acuity, of
hearing range-helped redefine the modern concept of hearing as
such. During the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, the
epistemic function of hearing expanded. Hearing took on the dual
role of test object and test instrument; in the latter case, human
hearing became a gauge by which to evaluate or regulate materials,
nonhuman organisms, equipment, and technological systems. This book
considers both the testing of hearing and testing with hearing to
explore the co-creation of modern epistemic and auditory cultures.
The book's twelve contributors trace the design of ever more
specific tests for the arts, education and communication, colonial
and military applications, sociopolitical and industrial endeavors.
Together, they demonstrate that testing as such became an enduring
and wide-ranging cultural technique in the modern period, one that
is situated between histories of scientific experimentation and
many fields of application.
Harry Styles’ rise to mega stardom is undeniable. From boy band heartthrob to global pop phenomenon, Styles has dominated both the music and fashion worlds for over 15 years and continues to break creative boundaries, and produce absolute bangers. Beloved as much for his charisma as for his melodic vocals, Harry delivers hit after hit, and sells out stadiums the world over. Yet even with such wild success, he stays true to his humble roots. The Essential... Harry Styles is his inspirational story in full. A must for all Stylers! The Essential... series Celebrating the world's best-loved popular icons and cultural luminaries, these are The Essential guidebooks, packed with facts, quotes, photos and stories.
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Last Rites
(Paperback)
Ozzy Osbourne
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R470
R419
Discovery Miles 4 190
Save R51 (11%)
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Ships in 5 - 10 working days
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'People say to me, if you could do it all again, knowing what you know
now, would you change anything? I'm like, f*** no. If I'd been clean
and sober, I wouldn't be Ozzy. If I'd done normal, sensible things, I
wouldn't be Ozzy.'
Husband. Father. Grandfather. Icon.
1948 - 2025
At the age of sixty-nine, Ozzy Osbourne was on a triumphant farewell
tour, playing to sold-out arenas and rave reviews all around the world.
Then: disaster.
In a matter of just a few weeks, he went from being hospitalised with a
finger infection to having to abandon his tour - and all public life -
as he faced near-total paralysis from the neck down.
Last Rites is the shocking, bitterly hilarious, never-before-told story
of Ozzy's descent into hell. Along the way are reflections on an
extraordinary life and career, including his marriage to wife Sharon,
and what it took for him to return to the stage for the triumphant Back
to the Beginning concert, streamed around the world, where Ozzy
reunited with his Black Sabbath bandmates for the final time.
Unflinching, brutally honest, but surprisingly life-affirming, Last
Rites demonstrates once again why Ozzy transcended his status as 'The
Godfather of Metal' and 'The Prince of Darkness' to become a modern-day
folk hero and national treasure.
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