Abstract
This article investigates the ways in which discourses and experiences of health and
healing have shaped the development of contemporary dance in France. It confronts
the problem of how to situate contemporary dance in relation to other dance genres
and suggests Robert Desjarlais’ concept of the ‘aesthetic of
experience’ as a helpful framework for understanding the ways in which
technique and virtuosity operate differently in contemporary dance than in other
dance forms. The article is ethnographic and historical and attempts to create a
dialogue between dance studies and medical anthropology. The ethnographic and
historical material has three parts. First, I offer an analysis of the cultural
idiom of illness as
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