When Dance Goes Digital
Meet dance major August Singer.
Hometown: Bend, Oregon
Thesis adviser: Prof. Carla Mann [dance]
Thesis: “Giving up the Ghost: Selfhood and Otherhood in Technologized Dance”
What it’s about: When technology is incorporated into dance performance, how does it change an audience’s perception of the dancers’ identities?
What it’s really about: Dancing while being transgender and online.
In high school: I was so excited to move on to college and discover communities that feel and think like me.
Influential classes: Prof. Victoria Fortuna’s Dance, Gender, and Sexuality class changed the way I think about my own identity, how I move through space, and how dance acts as a cultural signifier and cultural creator. Prof. Carla Mann’s Dance Improvisation taught me to think with my entire body and to understand how we learn by moving.
Influential book: Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God is one of the most gorgeously written books I’ve ever read.
Concept that blew my mind: The popularity, specific shape, and design of mass-produced dinnerware used in the United States is directly correlated with the rise of the American middle class, the post-WWII economic boom, and the assimilation of European immigrants into the myth of the American “melting pot.”
Cool stuff: Ran KRRC during a pandemic and hosted a radio talk show, worked at OMSI and the Q Center, threw several balls, fell in love with ceramics, choreographed and directed a thesis production.
How ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï changed me: The privilege of existing among ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ïies taught me so much about the kind of person I want to be and the ways I can grow to get there. The ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï dance faculty showed me how movement and embodiment is a form of knowledge that I can use to create spaces for myself in the dance world.
Help along the way: ½ñÈÕ³Ô¹Ï would not have been possible for me without financial aid.
What’s next: Earning my PhD in performance studies so I can teach and conduct research about gender, identity, and dance.