Sangam: A Confluence of Knowledge Streams

When our Senses Dance: Sensory-Somatic Awareness in Contemporary Approaches to Odissi Dance in India

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dc.contributor Daboo, Jerri
dc.creator Sen, Sabina Sweta
dc.date 2016-11-07T11:03:02Z
dc.date 2016-06-30
dc.date.accessioned 2023-02-23T09:58:48Z
dc.date.available 2023-02-23T09:58:48Z
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10871/24294
dc.identifier.uri http://localhost:8080/xmlui/handle/CUHPOERS/256607
dc.description This research investigates sensory-somatic awareness based approaches to the conditioning, training and performance of Odissi dance in India. Through a multidisciplinary and embodied methodology it analyses the practices of three contemporary Odissi dance institutes and a selection of individual dancers in India, who are moving beyond the traditional methodology. Drawing from ethnographic fieldwork in India, this research explores how sensory-somatic approaches incorporated by these dancers generate meaning-making and in what ways this enriches the dancers’ experience of dancing Odissi. As an outcome of the fieldwork, the term sensory-somatic is proposed and analysed in line with the dancers’ embodied experience of dancing Odissi. The analysis entails a paradigm that embraces the corporeal, sentient and socio-cultural bodymind, and the sensory aspects of senses, sensation, perception, sensibility and sensuality. These form two layers: the somatic and sensory which merge together as the sensory-somatic awareness. It takes into consideration the sensory perception and awareness leading to an agentic, enactive and embodied meaning-making and emotional engagement of the dancers. It also examines how the changing socio-cultural situation has been continuously affecting the Odissi dance embodiment. This thesis does not address the religious aspect and the experience of the audience in Odissi performance. The main focus remains the dancers’ individual experience of learning and performing Odissi dance. Moving away from the study of Odissi dance just as a reflection of the state, regional culture and representation of mythologies, this thesis is an investigation of the Odissi dancer’s meaningful, embodied and lived experience of Odissi dancing. It contributes to the debates on body-mind relationship, emotional engagement, place of the ‘self’, the student-oriented learning, psychophysical training and performance, and rasa-bhāva aesthetics. This study reveals that the sensory-somatic awareness is based upon reflexivity, independent enquiry, psychophysical health, bodymind awareness and leads to empowerment, agency, autonomy, plurality, confidence and responsibility, a level of relief from gender biases, and an inclusive approach to learning and performing.
dc.description UK India Education Research Initiative (UKIERI) for the PhD in Drama as part of a split site program between NIAS and Exeter.
dc.language en
dc.publisher University of Exeter
dc.publisher Drama
dc.rights This work is under an extended embargo. The video and audio files are permanently embargoed to comply with the copyright law.
dc.rights 3999-01-01
dc.rights I wish to publish selected sections of my thesis in various journals and potentially a monograph and the entire process may take longer than 18 months. The video and audio files are permanately embargoed to comply with the copyright law.
dc.subject sensory-somatic awareness, psychophysical, bodymind, self, agency, enactive, embodied meaning-making, Odissi dance, rasa-bhava, dancers' experience
dc.title When our Senses Dance: Sensory-Somatic Awareness in Contemporary Approaches to Odissi Dance in India
dc.type Thesis or dissertation
dc.type PhD in Drama
dc.type Doctoral
dc.type PhD


Files in this item

Files Size Format View
aud 1_record music for ex.mp3 12.37Mb application/octet-stream View/Open
aud2_step sound.3gpp 620.6Kb application/octet-stream View/Open
aud 3_ mohanty bol.mp3 2.149Mb application/octet-stream View/Open
SenS_TPC.pdf 11.86Mb application/pdf View/Open
SenS.pdf 14.24Mb application/pdf View/Open
vid_01_soundless ex.wmv 737.4Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_02_yoga with pakhawaj.wmv 327.8Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_03_biswajit knee ex.wmv 588.0Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_04_warm up ovm.wmv 75.58Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_05_chhau practice ovm.wmv 258.4Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_06_oda basic steps.wmv 238.0Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_07_fluidity in chouka.wmv 63.23Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_08_cool down.wmv 178.8Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_09_internal semi circle in chouka .wmv 60.56Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_10_chouka 5.wmv 108.6Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_11_utplavana.wmv 30.41Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_12_abhanga.wmv 80.16Mb video/wmv View/Open
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vid_14_swaramalika.wmv 95.06Mb video/wmv View/Open
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vid_18_batu.wmv 257.2Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_19_ODA_bols.wmv 104.0Mb video/wmv View/Open
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vid_25_touch points.wmv 272.7Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_26_looking.wmv 191.6Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_27_vasa and buda.wmv 49.49Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_28_ Nrityagram Final Day.mp4 32.02Mb video/mp4 View/Open
vid_29_radha krsna.wmv 339.4Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_30_ver 1 uttama.wmv 482.2Mb video/wmv View/Open
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vid_33_enactive.wmv 71.27Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_34_loosening hair.wmv 36.75Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_35_sujata oriya sitting.wmv 38.46Mb video/wmv View/Open
vid_36_lifting baby.wmv 119.1Mb video/wmv View/Open

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