دانلود کتاب Curiosity Recaptured: Exploring Ways We Think and Move [Alexander Technique]
by Jerry Sontag (Ed.)
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عنوان فارسی: کنجکاوی دوباره: بررسی راه ما فکر می کنم و حرکت می کند [روش الکساندر] |
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Each essay in Curiosity Recaptured tells a story. Some are about learning a new skill or the excitement of solving a particularly intractable problem. Others reexamine commonplace moments of our days that often go unnoticed. Each writer tells a personal story that takes us from a specific activity being described to the impact the activity has on our overall interest and curiosity in daily life.
Curiosity Recaptured, with 14 original illustrations, is now available in paperback. In the foreword, Robertson Davies - internationally acclaimed author and long-time student of the Alexander Technique - provides a sweeping history of the Technique, and of his introduction to it more than 40 years ago. Included in this collection are essays on cycling, problem-solving, chair design, dance, acting, childbirth, singing, grief, walking, tennis, and much more. Whatever your interests, Curiosity Recaptured can help you look at the world around you in new ways.
The Authors
Edward Avak was born in 1937. After finishing his academic studies in Classics and Chinese, he taught high school mathematics before being trained to teach the Alexander Technique by the Carringtons in London. Since 1972, he and his wife, Linda Avak, have directed the Center for the Alexander Technique in Menlo Park, California, which became a teacher training course in 1982.
Anne Bluethenthal is founder and artistic director of Anne Bluethenthal and Dancers, a company she established in 1984 in San Francisco. Anne has performed her own and other's work throughout the U.S. As well as her work as a choreographer and performer, she has developed an innovative approach to teaching dance and training dancers. Anne has had a private practice in the F.M. Alexander Technique since 1985, and teaches dance throughout the San Francisco Bay Area.
Deborah Caplan received her certification as a teacher of the Alexander Technique in 1953. She is a founding member of The American Center for the Alexander Technique, Inc. In 1956 she received her M.A. in physical therapy, and was affiliated with New York University Medical Center for eight years. She is the author of Back Trouble: A New Approach To Prevention and Recovery Based on the Alexander Technique. Deborah specializes in teaching the Alexander Technique to people with back problems.
Walter Carrington was born in 1915, the only child of the Rev. W.M. and Hannah Carrington. He first had lessons with Mr. Alexander in 1935 and joined his Training Course in 1936, qualifying as a teacher of the Technique in 1939. From 1941 to 1946 he served as a pilot in the Royal Air Force, after which he returned to work as an Assistant Teacher; and then carried on the Training Course after Mr. Alexander's death in 1955. He and his wife Dilys are Directors of the Constructive Teaching Centre Ltd in London.
Barry W. Collins grew up in Sydney, Australia where he went to University, receiving his degree in Dental Surgery in 1965. He trained to become an Alexander teacher under Don Burton and Elizabeth Atkinson from 1981-1984. He maintains an Alexander teaching practice in North London. In addition, he practices general dentistry two days a week. For the last 25 years, his main transport around London has been his bicycle, and holidays were cycling holidays.
Galen Cranz went to Reed College for her B.A., and continued on to the University of Chicago for her graduate work, getting a Ph.D. in Sociology in 1971. She trained to become an Alexander teacher with Thomas Lemens from 1987-1990 in New York City. Presently she lives and teaches the Technique in Oakland, California. She also teaches at the University of California, Berkeley, in the Architecture department.
Robertson Davies had three successive careers: first as an actor with the Old Vic Company in England; then as publisher of the Peterborough, Ontario, Examiner, and most recently as a university professor and first Master of Massey College at the University of Toronto, from which he retired in 1981. He has more than thirty books to his credit, among them several volumes of plays, as well as collections of essays, speeches, and belles lettres. As a novelist he has gained fame especially for his Deptford Trilogy; for the Salterton Trilogy; and for the Cornish Trilogy. He was the first Canadian to become an honorary member of the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters. He died on December 2, 1995.
Mary Holland was educated at Northfield School, Watford, England. She followed her dream of acting at the Webber-Douglas School of Dramatic Art, London. She trained to become an Alexander Technique teacher at the Constructive Teaching Centre with Walter and Dilys Carrington from 1968-1970. Since 1984, she has had a private practice as an Alexander teacher in Munich, Germany, and two years later began a small training course. She has worked as a graphic designer as well as an actress.
Barbara Kent is the Director of the Teacher Certification Program at the American Center for the Alexander Technique in New York City. She was certified by (ACAT-NY) in 1971, and has been involved in training teachers there for over 20 years. She has her B.A. in music from San Jose State University in her native state of California, and her M.A. in music from Brooklyn College of the City University of N.Y.. She sang professionally for a number of years. She continues to sing and to teach voice. Barbara has taught group classes and workshops in the Alexander Technique here and abroad. In addition to training teachers, Ms. Kent maintains a private practice in New York City, working extensively with performers and Alexander Teachers.
Ilana Machover is a qualified teacher of the Alexander Technique and of Medau Rhythmic Movement, and an Advanced Teacher for Britain's National Childbirth Trust. She assists at Misha Magidov's training school for Alexander Technique teachers in London.
As part of her private practice, she runs special Eutokia courses for pregnant women. She has also conducted many workshops for midwives, childbirth educators and Alexander Technique teachers on the relevance of the Technique to childbirth.Together with Angela and Jonathan Drake, she wrote Pregnancy and Birth the Alexander Way. She has two children and four grandchildren.
Ron Murdock was born and raised in Nova Scotia, Canada. He holds a Bachelor of Arts degree and Associateship in Music Diploma from Mount Allison University in New Brunswick. From 1962 to 1966 he studied privately with Professor Bernard Diamant in Montreal. Between 1966 and 1969 he completed his vocal studies with Professor Frederick Husler and Yvonne Rodd-Marling in Switzerland. In 1969 he moved to London, England where he established a career as a solo tenor, singing with English Opera Group and performing in oratorio performances in many English cathedrals. Between 1976 and 1979 he trained as an Alexander Teacher with Walter and Dilys Carrington. He has given voice/Alexander voice workshops in every major European city as well as in New York and Montreal and maintains a practice in London and Amsterdam.He now lives in Amsterdam.
Alexander Murray attended the Royal College of Music, London, and the Paris Conservatoire. He played flute in the Royal Air Force Band, and was for many years principal at the Royal Opera and the London Symphony. He trained in the Alexander Technique with Walter Carrington at the Constructive Teaching Centre from 1958-1966. For the past 19 years, he has been a professor at the University of Illinois, Urbana, Illinois.
Phyllis G. Richmond received her B.A. from Barnard College, M.A. from Columbia University, and certification as an Alexander Technique teacher from John Nicholls at the Brighton Alexander Training Centre in England. She is also a Certified Laban Movement Analyst and specialist in Historical Dance. Ms. Richmond has worked with theatre, dance, and opera as performer, teacher, movement coach, director, and choreographer for over 20 years. She is presently on the faculty of the Meadows School of the Arts at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, TX and the Blair School of Music at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, TN.
Vivien Schapera was born in 1956 in Cape Town, South Africa. She was trained in the Alexander Technique by Joyce Roberts in South Africa and Walter Carrington in London, and was certified as a teacher in 1983 by Walter Carrington. She received her Masters in Psychology from the University of Cape Town in December 1984. She and her family immigrated to the United States in October, 1991, and started a training course in September 1993.
Jerry Sontag is the publisher and editor of Mornum Time Press, a family-run business founded in 1993. In 1994, Jerry edited and published Thinking Aloud: Talks on Teaching the Alexander Technique by Walter Carrington. A second volume of Mr. Carrington's talks is planned for release in late 1998. Jerry trained to become an Alexander teacher at the Center for the Alexander Technique in Menlo Park, California. He has maintained a private teaching practice in San Francisco since 1985.
Walton Laurence White, known as Larry, is a native of Los Angeles. He completed his B.A. at UCLA in Theatre Arts in 1963, and spent several years in the graduate film program. Larry did his teacher training in London from 1973-1976 with Patrick Macdonald. Larry has lived and taught the Technique in Santa Monica, California since 1976.