APA Bibliography
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Barbour, K. (2012). Standing center: Autoethnographic writing and solo dance performance. Cultural Studies/Critical Methodologies, 12(1), 67-71. doi:10.1177/1532708611430491
Gaborik, P. (2009). Embodied texts: Symbolist playwright-dancer collaborations. Dance Research Journal, 41(1), 103-105. doi: 10.1353/drj.0.0028
Jago, R., Sebire, S., Cooper, A. R., Haase, A. M., Powell, J., Davis, L., & ... Montgomery, A. A. (2012). Bristol girls dance project feasibility trial: Outcome and process evaluation results. International Journal Of Behavioral Nutrition & Physical Activity, 9(1), 83-92. doi:10.1186/1479-5868-9-83
Kluge, M., Tang, A., Glick, L., LeCompte, M., & Willis, B. (2012). Let's keep moving : A dance movement class for older women recently relocated to a continuing care retirement community (CCRC). Arts & Health: International Journal For Research, Policy & Practice, 4(1), 4-15. doi:10.1080/17533015.2010.551717
Lerman, L. (2011). Hiking the horizontal: Field notes from a choreographer. Middleton, CT: Wesleyan University Press.
Letiche, H. (2012). Research ethics: Dance, presence, performance and performativity. Culture & Organization, 18(3), 177-193. doi:10.1080/14759551.2011.644668
Morris, A. (2012). Seeking new ways of living community in the classroom and the world: an action research study. Research In Dance Education,13(2), 235-251. doi:10.1080/14647893.2012.685465
Myers, N. (2012). Dance Your PhD: Embodied Animations, Body Experiments, and the Affective Entanglements of Life Science Research. Body & Society, 18(1), 151-189. doi:10.1177/1357034X11430965
Autoethnographic Movement Inquiry: TRY IT YOURSELF!

Karen Barbour's Activity: Turning Inward (Navel Gazing)
Lie resting on the floor.
Draw your knees in and rest them comfortably together, feet relaxed on the floor, arms to the sides easily.
Nestle your body into the floor and allow the floor to support your weight.
Pay attention to your breathing, noticing the movement of your chest, back, and abdomen as you inhale and exhale.
Now bring your awareness to your belly button, to your center of gravity. Your belly button is what remains of your umbilical cord, your lifegiving beginnings, your first connections to your social world.
Allow your awareness to deepen.
Let the smallest and simplest movements initiate from your navel.
Try a tiny rocking motion. Move easily, gently from this earliest connection.
Rest.
From our very fundamental beginnings, our development unfolds. In this development we are intimately connected to an other, mother, and to our genealogy. We are also connected in our development to our social world.
READ FULL ARTICLE TO SEE THIS AND OTHER EXERCISES FOR SELF-INQUIRY THROUGH MOVEMENT:
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Barbour Standing Center 2012.pdf Size : 1149.996 Kb Type : pdf |

