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Explore Dr. Barbara Sellers-Young's works.
The early Sudanese work frames dance as a social and ritual structure. In the study of the Zande Pumbo, Sellers-Young argues that dance must be analyzed with its full event-context: kinship labor, mourning, leadership, music, spatial arrangement, gender relations, food, alcohol, and social participation. This is her first major methodological principle. The Pumbo’s changing form registers colonial disruption, war, altered authority, shifting gender relations, and changing beliefs about witchcraft. Dance is both expressive and diagnostic.
The zar work extends this view to possession ritual. Here performance transforms private female crisis into public, theatrical, communal action. Sellers-Young draws on social drama and the ritual/theatre continuum to show that healing, role-playing, trance, sacrifice, music, dance, and feasting form a structured process of redress. Her early view is therefore anthropological and functional, but already attentive to embodiment, gender, and temporary solidarity.
Continuity: dance is never isolated movement.
New emphasis: performance as a mechanism for producing concord, recognition, and temporary social reordering.
Open era page Late 1990s iThe 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.
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