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Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the
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03 Mar 2020, 17:29
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Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the dance reveal the depth of her determination to create a lyric form of the art which was free of characterization, storytelling, and the theatrical exhibition of skills: She wished to discard the traditional methods and established vocabularies of such dance forms as ballet and to explore the internal sources of human expressiveness. She shunned bodily ornamentation and strove to use only the natural movements of her body, undistorted by acrobatic exaggeration and stimulated only by internal compulsion. In her recitals Duncan danced to the music o Beethoven, Wagner, and Gluck, among others, but, contrary to popular belief, she made no attempt to visualize or to interpret the music; rather, she simply relied on it to provide the inspiration for expressing inner feelings through movement. She did not regard this use of music as ideal, however, believing that she would someday dispense with music entirely. That day never came.
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41% (02:08) correct
59% (01:57) wrong based on 131 sessions
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17. The author is primarily concerned with Duncan's
(A) masterful lyricism as expressed in her writings on the dance (B) concerted efforts to subdue the natural movements of the dance (C) belated recognition that she could not actually fulfill all of her ideals for the dance (D) basic standards for the dance form that she wished to create and perform (E) continuous responsiveness to a popular misconception about the nature of her new art form
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64% (00:47) correct
36% (01:05) wrong based on 112 sessions
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18. The author implies that Duncan relied on music in her recitals in order to
(A) interpret musical works solely by means of natural body movements (B) foster the illusion that music serves as an inspiration for the dance (C) inspire the expression of inner feeling when she danced (D) validate the public belief that music inspires the expression of feeling through movement (E) counter the public belief that she made no attempt to visualize music
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71% (00:59) correct
29% (01:12) wrong based on 84 sessions
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19. According to the passage, Duncan intended to develop an art form that would do all of the following EXCEPT
(A) avoid the use of standard ballet techniques (B) revitalize an earlier established vocabulary (C) draw on internal sources of human expressiveness (D) create intended effects without the use of acrobatic exaggeration (E) derive inspiration solely from inner feelings
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54% (01:11) correct
46% (01:07) wrong based on 92 sessions
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20. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following endeavors is LEAST compatible with Duncan's ideals for the dance?
(A) Using music to stimulate the inspiration to dance (B) Attempting to free an art form of both characterization and storytelling (C) Minimizing the theatrical exhIbition of skills (D) Being inspired to express inner feeling through movement (E) Creating a lyric art form by drawing on inner personal resources
Schools: Copenhagen Business School - Class of 2022
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Re: Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the
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03 May 2020, 22:26
3
4/4 04:01 1st question: D-->throughout the entire passage we are told how Isadora was trying to create her own basic standard for a dance for. Basically the entire passage is concerned with it.
2nd question
C-->Can be based solely on the following sentence "In her recitals Duncan danced to the music o Beethoven, Wagner, and Gluck, among others, but, contrary to popular belief, she made no attempt to visualize or to interpret the music; rather, she simply relied on it to provide the inspiration for expressing inner feelings through movement."
3rd question
B-->we are told that she wants to abolish the current vocabulary, yet we are not given any specific data on her wanting to reinvigorate an earlier established vocab
4th question
A-->basically the entire passage tries to tell us that no, she doesn't want music for inspiration..thereby this answer fits as a glove
Re: Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the
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27 May 2020, 19:29
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17. The author is primarily concerned with Duncan's
(D) basic standards for the dance form that she wished to create and perform Correct- this is overall theme of passage.
18. The author implies that Duncan relied on music in her recitals in order to (C) inspire the expression of inner feeling when she danced correct- she simply relied on it to provide the inspiration for expressing inner feelings through movement
19. According to the passage, Duncan intended to develop an art form that would do all of the following EXCEPT (B) revitalize an earlier established vocabulary correct: She wished to discard the traditional methods and established vocabularies
20. It can be inferred from the passage that which of the following endeavors is LEAST compatible with Duncan's ideals for the dance? POE (A) Using music to stimulate the inspiration to dance Correct. she simply relied on it to provide the inspiration for expressing inner feelings through movement. She did not regard this use of music as ideal
Re: Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the
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14 Apr 2021, 21:35
2
This passage seems to abruptly change from talking about writing to dancing. Because of this, I was quite surprised during my reading and had to check back what I read to make sure it’s talking about the writing at the beginning - which obviously cost me quite a bit of time doubting myself and what I read. Does anyone have the same feeling? Is this only me? Or is this passage really talking 2 different things - writing and dancing?
This is the sentence which started abruption in me. Out of nowhere, the author is mentioning “movements of her body.” After reading that I panicked, started to questioning what is really going on here. Is this passage about writing or dancing? or that “masterly writings on the dance” somehow has a different meaning of dancing?
Quote:
She shunned bodily ornamentation and strove to use only the natural movements of her body, undistorted by acrobatic exaggeration and stimulated only by internal compulsion.
After some thought after reading the whole passage, I concluded that she’s a special dancer and use dancing as the main theme to guide me answering questions. Even though I got all correct, I’m sure I may experience this disconnection again?
Re: Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the
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21 Mar 2025, 05:34
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Re: Isadora Duncan's masterly writings on the di:lnCe reveal the [#permalink]