Hovey Burgess system (Circus): Difference between revisions
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Hovey Burgess pedagogy is widely praised for being a well researched, compact system that still encompasses very large range of skills. Hovey Burgess pedagogy criticized for not expanding easily to accommodate new skills, for the general difficulty people have finding other pedagogical tools that match the system, and for the lack of depth the system presents. Many have argued that | Hovey Burgess pedagogy is widely praised for being a well researched, compact system that still encompasses very large range of skills. Hovey Burgess pedagogy criticized for not expanding easily to accommodate new skills, for the general difficulty people have finding other pedagogical tools that match the system, and for the lack of depth the system presents. Many have argued that | ||
Hovey's system called for a second book to address these issues, however no such book was ever written. | |||
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Burgess has been known to compare his system to [[Newton's third law]]: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Vaulting is concerned with action. [[Juggling]] is concerned with reaction, and equilibrium is the intersection of action and reaction. | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
* The | * {{cite journal | last = Burgess | first = Hovey| authorlink = | coauthors = | title = The classification of circus techniques | journal = The Drama Review: TDR | volume = 18.1 | pages = 65–70 | date = 1974}} | ||
* | * {{cite book|author=Burgess, Hovey|title=Circus Techniques: Juggling, Equilibristics, Vaulting|edition=Rev. edn|publisher=B. Dube|year=1990|id=ISBN 0917643062}}[[Category:Suggestion Bot Tag]] |
Latest revision as of 11:01, 29 August 2024
The Hovey Burgess pedagogy divides circus skills into 3 categories, each with 3 skill groupings.
Hovey Burgess pedagogy is widely praised for being a well researched, compact system that still encompasses very large range of skills. Hovey Burgess pedagogy criticized for not expanding easily to accommodate new skills, for the general difficulty people have finding other pedagogical tools that match the system, and for the lack of depth the system presents. Many have argued that Hovey's system called for a second book to address these issues, however no such book was ever written.
Category | Preliminary | Essential | Diversified |
---|---|---|---|
Juggling | Balancing objects | Toss juggling: balls, rings clubs | Gyroscopic Juggling: Devil sticks, Diablo, plate spinning, etc |
Equilibristics | Headstands and hand balancing | Balancing: on rolling objects (unicycle, rolla bolla, etc), on "stilting" objects (stilts, unsuported ladder, etc) and human columns. | Rigging: Trapeze, horizontal bar, slackwire, tight wire, etc |
Vaulting | Jumping | Turning the body along its long, medium and short axes | Catapults |
Burgess has been known to compare his system to Newton's third law: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. Vaulting is concerned with action. Juggling is concerned with reaction, and equilibrium is the intersection of action and reaction.
References
- Burgess, Hovey (1974). "The classification of circus techniques". The Drama Review: TDR 18.1: 65–70.
- Burgess, Hovey (1990). Circus Techniques: Juggling, Equilibristics, Vaulting, Rev. edn. B. Dube. ISBN 0917643062.