Labanotation: a universal movement notation language

March 21st, 2002 | RESEARCH

This paper describes how a universal language for notating dance and, more generally, movement was elaborated, known as "Kinetography Laban", or rather "Labanotation". It was devised by choreographer and movement theorist Rudolf von Laban, who outlined it for the first time in 1928, in the journal Schrifttanz. His system differs from precedent notation systems in that Labanotation is rigorous and universal, as it is based not on one particular style or technique but on the general of kinetics underlying human motion. Its geometrical and abstract symbols also free it from language constraints, thus making it universally comprehensivle. Through his kinetography, Laban freed dance from the transcience of individual performances, thereby providing a way to capture and reproduce dance, to hand down choreographic masterpieces for posterity and to simplify movement analysis in other branches of study as well.

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Team Members

Silvana Barbacci, Author, ISAS

Citation

Identifier Type: ISSN
Identifier: 1824-2049

Publication: Journal of Science Communication
Volume: 1
Number: 1

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Audience: Scientists
Discipline: Art | music | theater | Mathematics | Physics
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Public Programs | Theater Programs