conference paper / 2009
Library
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 2005-2010 i2005-2010: Reflexivity, Mimesis, Contemplation, and Institutional Pedagogy
This period broadens and complicates the earlier positions. In belly dance studies, Sellers-Young sharpens the critique of appropriation, commercialization, and the imagined Arab body. She traces belly dance from the Chicago World’s Fair and “Little Egypt” through Arab American nightlife, second-wave feminism, goddess spirituality, and branded spectacle. Enjoyment is not denied, but it is placed inside unequal histories of representation.
In “Dance, Mimesis and the Conscious Body,” she identifies different pedagogical regimes: optical, somatic, and mediated. Mirror-based training produces self-objectification and visual abstraction; direct somatic apprenticeship produces incorporation into lineage and tradition; screen-based learning produces a more autonomous but more image-mediated learner. This is one of her clearest statements that pedagogy produces kinds of consciousness.
Her work on ethnographic perspective marks a decisive methodological turn. Reflexivity must include not only social identity but sensory structure, neurological pattern, and movement history. She names the genetic/structural, imaginal/social, and performance selves. This framework later becomes central to her somatic autoethnography.
The contemplation and neuroplasticity writings connect performance training to broader academic reform. Contemplative practice is framed as a third way of knowing, complementary to rational analysis and empirical observation. Neuroscience supplies a vocabulary for attention, plasticity, habit, and embodied change, though the underlying practical insight comes from performance and somatics.
Continuity: technique forms subjectivity.
Expansion: the performance studio becomes a model for higher education.
Open era pageconference paper / 2009
The Value of Arts in Higher Education
This presentation version of Sellers-Young's argument for the arts in higher education emphasizes the public and pedagogical stakes of artistic practice. The arts are framed as modes of inquiry that engage body, imagination, intellect, and community. Their value lies not in ornamenting the university but in expanding how knowledge is produced and shared. The piece connects her administrative leadership with her scholarship. S...conference paper / 2007
Contemplation, Consciousness and the Academy
This paper argues that contemplative practice has a place in higher education because it cultivates forms of attention neglected by conventional academic training. Sellers-Young situates meditation, breath, movement, and reflective awareness as ways of knowing that complement rational analysis and empirical observation. The aim is not anti-intellectualism, but a more complete model of inquiry. The work extends her studio-base...conference paper / 2006
Dance, Mimesis and the Conscious Body
This paper examines how dancers learn through mimesis, and what different modes of imitation do to consciousness. Sellers-Young distinguishes between optical learning through mirrors, embodied apprenticeship through close teacher-student transmission, and mediated learning through screens and recordings. Each method produces a different relation between self, image, authority, lineage, and bodily knowledge. The work is one of...conference paper / 1999
Exploration, Breath and Imagery: A Unifying Framework for Movement Training
This paper formulates one of Sellers-Young's clearest pedagogical models for performer training: exploration, breath, and imagery. The three terms name more than class exercises. Exploration shifts the performer from correction to inquiry; breath links physiology, attention, feeling, and action; imagery organizes movement through sensory and metaphorical structures stored in the body. The work is a bridge between her ethnogra...conference paper / 1997