An Alien Phenomenology in Dance: Virtual Telematic Performances as Embodied Philosophy

Strutt, Daniel. 2025. An Alien Phenomenology in Dance: Virtual Telematic Performances as Embodied Philosophy. Documenta, 42(1), pp. 129-162. ISSN 0771-8640 [Article]

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Abstract or Description

This article suggests that dance practice-led exploration of avatar embodiment and telematic performance in 3D virtual environments (such as those generated in real-time graphics engines) can be a meaningful mode of philosophical discovery—a mode of affective doing, creating, becoming, and embodied thinking. By exerting kinaesthetic agency and shared expression within corporeal forms that are both of our body and yet virtual as well as in avatar representations that do not necessarily correlate to our actual anatomical articulation, can we explore a new remote relationality of extended, non-human, or alien embodiment within virtual space? I explore the possibility that, if this experience is indeed philosophical, it can be expansive and joyous, critically and socially engaged, and even ethical in nature, despite the techno-political forces of capture and control which are understood to be at work in so-called volumetric regimes. To consider this I draw upon a proposed alignment of ideas from Ian Bogost (from “procedural rhetoric” to alien phenomenology) and from Laura Marks (unfolding-enfolding aesthetics and the “talisman image”) to think about virtual media forms that enhance dance’s inherent virtuality and its propensity for kinaesthetic metaphorism, ethical intersubjectivity, and play.

Item Type:

Article

Identification Number (DOI):

https://doi.org/10.21825/documenta.93273

Additional Information:

This work is an output of projects funded by both the British Academy and the AHRC.

Keywords:

Digital Dance, Phenomenology, Aesthetics, Virtual, Immersive Media

Departments, Centres and Research Units:

Media, Communications and Cultural Studies

Dates:

DateEvent
10 January 2025Published

Item ID:

38112

Date Deposited:

17 Jan 2025 14:25

Last Modified:

17 Jan 2025 14:25

Peer Reviewed:

Yes, this version has been peer-reviewed.

URI:

https://research.gold.ac.uk/id/eprint/38112

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