Essays

Returning to Lacan: Psychoanalytic Theory and the Uses of Language in Rehearsal Processes of European Contemporary Dance

Authors

  • David Rittershaus Hochschule Mainz: University of Applied Sciences

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21827/ejtp.3.41755

Keywords:

Language, dance, body, Lacan, Deleuze

Abstract

In this article, I examine the role and different uses of language within the creative processes of European contemporary dance. Focusing mainly on the creation of William Forsythe’s performance Sider (2011), but also considering a few other examples such as Taneli Törmä’s Effect (2019), I trace a search for language that helps to make movement concepts tangible. In doing so, I draw on a concept of language that follows from Lacan’s psychoanalysis and his theory of the signifier. By returning to Lacan, I develop a reading of his work that challenges the predominant view that, within a Lacanian framework, the entry into the symbolic order means the (dancing) body is inevitably limited in its possibilities because it is either caught in a cultural and ideological grid, or subject to social normativity. In this attempt to revitalise Lacan, I discuss the influential critique of his psychoanalysis by Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, whose own philosophical work has been particularly prominent in recent dance studies where psychoanalysis consequently lost its interpretative appeal. By shedding light on not only the divergences but also the commonalities between Lacan and Deleuze/Guattari, I intend to show what value Lacan’s theorisation of language still might have for probing the complex relationship between linguistic expressions and bodily enactment within contemporary dance.

Author Biography

David Rittershaus, Hochschule Mainz: University of Applied Sciences

Studied Applied Theatre Studies at University of Giessen, Germany. Today he is a dance and theatre scholar with Motion Bank, a research project originally initiated by choreographer William Forsythe in Frankfurt and located today at Mainz University of Applied Sciences. He is currently writing his doctoral thesis on the digital documentation and study of choreographic processes. Since 2020, he has been a lecturer at Goethe University Frankfurt in the Department of Theatre Studies. In addition to his academic activities, he regularly works as a freelance cultural journalist and critic.

Published

2021-09-24