conference paper / 1997
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Explore Dr. Barbara Sellers-Young's works.
Late 1990s: Intercultural Exchange and Somatic Pedagogy
The late 1990s consolidate two major directions. First, Sellers-Young’s intercultural theatre work on Shi No Bara treats misunderstanding as productive. The value of exchange lies less in representing another culture than in making one’s own assumptions visible through rehearsal, embodiment, touring, and audience encounter. Intercultural competence becomes a reflexive bodily and perceptual process.
Second, her actor-training essays formulate the triad of exploration, breath, and imagery. She now develops a more systematic account of the performer as a psychophysical organism. The actor’s problem is not lack of technique alone, but habitual embodiment: ingrained patterns of perception, movement, metaphor, and self-image. Training should create a “performer’s self” capable of adaptive response.
Continuity: embodiment is socially and culturally formed.
Expansion: embodied knowledge becomes a formal pedagogy, not only an ethnographic object.
Open era page 2000-2004 i2000-2004: Japanese Influence, Body-Mind Integration, and Critical Thinking
The Japanese performance writings deepen her theory of embodied transmission. Nihon buyo in America is not merely nostalgic heritage; it is a site where diaspora, incarceration memory, gendered discipline, teacher-student hierarchy, and Japanese American identity are bodily negotiated. The iemoto system preserves continuity while enabling new subjectivities across generations.
At the same time, her work on Japanese influence in American actor training reframes Zen, Zeami, Suzuki training, and related practices as answers to a crisis in Method-dominated acting pedagogy. The “one pointed mind” integrates breath, stillness, concentration, inner image, outer form, and action.
Her educational writings extend somatics beyond performance. Breath, perception, and action become elements of critical thinking. “Feel, fuse, and follow” turns breath into a practical model of reflection: receiving, integrating, and responding. She now argues explicitly that thought is bodily, that education should cultivate embodied attention, and that critical inquiry can be deepened through movement.
Continuity: bodily training changes consciousness.
Revision: Asian-derived practices are treated less as exotic resources than as disciplined modes of attention requiring careful translation.
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