AFR 111
Afro-Modern Dance I: Theory & Practice (Dunham Technique) Spring 2025
Division II
Cross-listed DANC 111

Class Details

Modern African diasporic dance creates a conversation between the past and the present; it brings forth memories of the African “homeland” and of the dispersal of African bodies around the world, while simultaneously engaging the current joys, pains, challenges, and cultural growth of Black people. Through movement and rhythm, dancers experience the embodied knowledge of previous generations, while connecting to contemporary cultural, political, and economic realities. Katherine Dunham devoted her life to exploring and exposing the multiple layers and complexities of the African diasporic experience through her ethnographic dance choreographies, her dance technique, her schools, her music, and her writing. Dunham’s work as a dance anthropologist, artist, educator, and humanitarian is manifested in Dunham Technique; the technique is a fusion of African diasporic dance, ballet and modern dance, and functions as an embodied medium for cultural communication. The technique is considered “a way of life” as it uses theory and philosophy to engage participants in a holistic experience that is not only physical, but also intellectual, emotional, and spiritual. Through this combination of physicality, history, theory, and philosophy, Dunham Technique is a tool to understand one’s inner self and place oneself within a historical and cultural framework. In this course, students will explore the history, theory, and philosophies of Dunham Technique and Katherine Dunham, while actively participating with the technique’s movement concepts and vocabulary. Students will engage in the fundamentals of a Dunham Technique movement class through center floor work, barre exercises, progressions, and choreography. The course will combine the studio experience of the physical technique with lectures and discussions. Students will learn about the three theories of Dunham Technique (Form and Function, Intercultural Communication, and Socialization through the Arts) and its three philosophies (Self-Examination, Detachment, and Discrimination) while also learning the history and historical context of the technique and its creator.
The Class: Format: seminar; The course meets in person, twice per week for the full semester. The course includes two main integrated components: physical dance training and lecture/discussion.
Limit: 12
Expected: 10-12
Class#: 3957
Grading: yes pass/fail option, yes fifth course option
Requirements/Evaluation: Students will be evaluated on the completion of journals, the quality of the final movement assignment, the completion of weekly reading assignments, and their participation during class activities/discussions.
Prerequisites: None
Enrollment Preferences: Students interested in expanding their knowledge of African diasporic dance and Dunham Technique.
Distributions: Division II
Notes: This course is cross-listed and the prefixes carry the following divisional credit:
DANC 111 Division I AFR 111 Division II
Attributes: AFR Core Electives
AFR Culture, Performance, and Popular Technologies

Class Grid

Updated 2:47 am

Course Catalog Search


(searches Title and Course Description only)
TERM




SUBJECT
DIVISION



DISTRIBUTION



ENROLLMENT LIMIT
COURSE TYPE
Start Time
End Time
Day(s)