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Democracy in Movement – Bodies of Protest

PhD candidate Benjamin Pohlig's doctoral project.

Academic summary

The PhD project “Democracy in Movement – Bodies of Protest” combines artistic research with practical field studies to investigate the role that bodies and movement play in our democracies and especially in forms of protest today. It asks what can be learned about protests as a part of our democratic process if looked at through the lens of dance and choreography.

Over the past decade different social movements have taken to the streets en masse to express their political will by moving bodies, be it through gathering, marching, lying down or dancing. “Democracy in Movement – Bodies of Protest” will conduct field studies into these kinds of protest movements and create choreographic formats to reflect on how they rehearse and perform political will with bodies and movement on a large as well individual scale. The project will probe and experiment with possibilities to experience and practice a physical sense and agency of citizenship through dance and choreography, while also questioning how dance itself can become a site of protest. The project intends to operate at and generate knowledge from the intersections of art and politics, to elucidate the choreographies and movements underlying our democracies, both in order to question the significance of dance in wider society, as well as to make physical experiences of politics accessible to a general public.

Project facts

Project title Democracy in Movement – Bodies of Protest
Project manager
Start date
End date
Project status Active
Department Academy of Dance