ABSTRACT
This case study focuses on the lived experiences of participants in a Danish community dance program for dancers over sixty years of age and centers on how dance in this setting contributes to building affectivity; that is, what motivates participants’ movement and moves them. Participants describe their affective experiences as developing through dancing in three main ways, by attending to: 1) the spatiality of their own bodies and the space itself, 2) the qualities with which they move, and 3) their own kinesthetic awareness. Additional elements contribute to participants’ affective experience, such as the instructors’ approaches and their metaphoric verbal cuing. By considering the material and interpersonal components that shape an affective experience as a lens to understand the data, this article aims to detail how phenomenological aspects of affectivity unfold and are productive in this particular community dance setting.
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank Susanne Ravn for her feedback on previous drafts of this article and to the dancers and staff at Dansekapellet. This project was conducted while in a postdoctoral research position in the MoCS Research Unit at University of Southern Denmark.