Inhale, Exhale, Hold Your Breath to Dance and Live with Seas and Oceans

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37536/ECOZONA.2026.17.1.5891

Keywords:

breathing, dancing, breath-holding, diving, non-human animals

Abstract

This article aims to examine to what extent dancing in contact with seas and oceans encourages us to rethink the paradigms of our terrestrial lives. With this in mind, I will study the porous relationships that this non-verbal art weaves with the environment. To this end, I will develop an analysis of breathing variations and human perceptions. First, I'll demonstrate how the experience of different breath rhythms on the shores has driven the dance and thoughts of pioneering choreographer Isadora Duncan (Perrin) and her successors. I will then focus on two dance-videos, Amy Greenfield's Tides (created in response to Duncan's “The Dancer of the Future”) and Babette Mangolte's Water Motor, in order to measure how aquatic experiences, and in particular that of a non-human temporality, move our perceptions. This phenomenon is revealed through the use of the camera, which provides a print of these intimate and fleeting sensations. Finally, after studying breath variations, I'll draw on Laurence Louppe's work on “non-breathing” and analyze the piece and the short documentary by apneist dancer Marine Chesnais, both entitled Habiter le seuil. Here, I'll examine the practice of breath-holding in aquatic environments “which works on the gravitational tissue of the spectator, produces transfers of perception and state” (Louppe) and enables us to meet marine mammals. In conclusion, I will support the idea that these breathless marine encounters change our perception of the terrestrial world, invite us to “inhabit the threshold,” to explore this space of transformation, and offer us the opportunity of “becoming other” (Abram).

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Author Biography

Caroline Granger, University of Caen Normandy

Caroline Granger holds a PhD in American Studies and is an associate member of ERIBIA at the University of Caen Normandy. Her dissertation, Crossing Cultural History and Ecopoetics: a Study of Torsions in Merce Cunningham’s Choreographic Works, advocates a transdisciplinary approach linking human dance movement to its environment. It is accompanied by a photographic portfolio reflecting her interest in the field of research-creation. In 2019, she was awarded a doctoral research grant from the Institut des Amériques, which enabled her to travel to New York to continue her research in situ. In 2023, she published the interview, “From the Fluttering of Wings to the Ruminations of a Cow: a Conversation on Our Relationships to the Living Beings with Anna Chirescu,” in the journal Recherches en danse.

Published

2026-04-30

Issue

Section

Articles: Sea More Blue