Couroux, Marc G.Pederson, Kari Lynn2022-08-082022-08-082022-05-192022-08-08http://hdl.handle.net/10315/39669This is an embodied research project that explores the subtle, unseeable, unhearable forces at work within performance. It uses a common improvisational duet as its anchor, the rules for which seem paradoxical: move in perfect unison and at the same time, but neither dancer can initiate movement, both must follow. Despite this, a choreography unfolds. The structure of this research project is an exploration of why this is so, and along the way uncovers applicable information to common, yet esoteric performance techniques: listening, tuning in, and becoming present. This project posits that the improvisation works because its slowness and focus allows for a magnification of the charged affect potential between the two dancers, referred to throughout as the "bloom space." The paradoxical task of mimicking a partner in real time, without initiating movement, is an attempt to stay in or stay with the bloom space. Even though neither dancer can initiate movement, the dancers begin to move because bodies and the moment are never still; they are teeming with affect, and affect moves. The dancers are able to mimic one another through the freneticism of affect potential and kinaesthesis. The research takes place over the course of the Covid-19 pandemic, and is thus influenced by this unexpected context.Author owns copyright, except where explicitly noted. Please contact the author directly with licensing requests.TheaterFeeling Subtle: A Practice-Based Study of How the Body Listens, Tunes in, and Becomes Present in Performance (and in COVID-Time)Electronic Thesis or Dissertation2022-08-08AffectDanceChoreographyTheatrePerformanceEcologyListeningTune inAffective ecologyAffect theorySound studiesVibration modelPresenceMeditationInterdisciplinaryThe bodyThe relational bodyPractice based researchPractice led researchStanislavskyJulian HenriquesPauline OliverosDeborah KapchanDoing nothingBloom spaceMimesisKinaesthesisSuasan Leigh FosterAnna GibbsNatasha MeyersCarla HustakEmbodied researchPhenomenologyPandemicCOVID 19ParadoxSound bodySonic bodyWhat the body can doCharles DarwinEvolutionInvolutionThinking through the bodyBecoming withMirroringMirror duetTheatre practiceDance practiceImprovisationImprovisational danceImprovisational performanceBreath meditationKinaesthetic empathyKinaesthesiaMimicryAffect potentialBody listeningVibrotactileNon-verbal communicationSlent communicationSensesSynaesthesiaResounding subjectBorderless bodyRelational subjectRelational ecologyYvonne RainerJenny OdellBody is never stillAffect contagionFeelingSensingEmpathyCOVID timeRichard SerraBoomerangNancy Holt