The Embodied Venue: Constructing Identity Through Music and Dance
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University Honors College, Middle Tennessee State University
Abstract
This research explores how participation in different dance and music settings
cultivates distinct forms of embodied capital and influences identity formation. Drawing
on Pierre Bourdieu's concepts of habitus, social field, and bodily hexis, and incorporating
Albert Bandura's social learning theory, this study examines the micro-level processes
through which individuals acquire, display, and negotiate cultural meanings through
dance. Utilizing a qualitative, exploratory interview approach, this research aimed to
build on existing research on how space, place, and atmosphere interact with the
individual and the collective within the dance and music scene, as well as how
individuals interact with each other to “build” the space. Findings showed participation in
dance and music scenes aided in skill acquisition and impacted how individuals make
sense of their identity. These findings provide implications for dance as a tool for adult
language acquisition, personal development, non-verbal communication skills, and
overall stronger relationships and community ties.
