Re-Thinking Lupercalia

2017; Brill; Volume: 5; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1163/22129758-12341289

ISSN

2212-9758

Autores

Zoa Alonso Fernández,

Tópico(s)

Martial Arts: Techniques, Psychology, and Education

Resumo

This paper is an addendum to the article “Choreography of Lupercalia : Corporeality in Roman Public Religion”, published in the latest issue of grms . In my previous essay, I explored the methodological possibilities of the notion ‘choreography’, a concept that has been critically re-elaborated by dance scholars in the past two decades, and applied it to the wandering of the Luperci in order to understand the performative role of their mobility and physicality as traits shared with other dances within the realm of Roman public religion. The aim of the current article is to refine the approaches proposed for Lupercalia by examining aspects of training, performance, and reception that are intrinsic to this choreographic practice, and to observe these elements in light of the Roman idea of sodalitas (‘corporation’). This approach will allow us to determine how dancing—and, more exactly, corporeality—works in the construction of Roman identities.

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