Organizing choreography around the complex relationships between internal states, using Murasaki's multi-character narrative structure to create layered movement.
The Tale of Genji operates through intricate relationships and perspectives—multiple characters with competing desires and interior worlds creating a rich social texture. This structural principle transforms how choreographers organize movement. Rather than a single narrative line, create phrases that represent different psychological states or aspects of self in relationship. A duet becomes not two individuals but two dimensions of consciousness. A group section represents competing impulses or social tensions. This approach, drawn from Murasaki's narrative sophistication, allows choreography to achieve psychological complexity. The dancers embody not just physical movement but relational dynamics. Each movement choice reflects how one state relates to another: dominance, support, resistance, harmony. This framework is particularly powerful for contemporary work exploring identity, social structures, or internal conflict. By studying how Murasaki balanced multiple perspectives and revealed character through social interaction, choreographers can create dances that operate on similar levels of psychological nuance. The result is work that resonates beyond formal beauty into territories of meaning and human understanding.
Peri can explain this concept, give practical examples, help you decide whether it applies to your situation, or recommend a journey if appropriate.
Explore related journeys or tell Peri what you're working through.