Professor Babak Sarrafan Becomes New Adobe Education Leader

Babak Sarrafan at work

Babak Sarrafan at work

Congratulations to Professor Babak Sarrafan, who’s been selected to serve a two-year term as Adobe Education Leader.  Adobe Systems has recognized the work that Babak does as innovative on a global scale, with potential to influence others within and beyond San José State University.

AEL Coordinator Daniela Birch writes,

“At Adobe we look to our AELs to engage with us to help refine a vision of effective technology use that can enhance learning and scholarship in education environments. We encourage them to explore innovative educational solutions with the tools and training we provide, and to share their discoveries through publication, training their peers, or presenting to the broader education community. Being part of this program puts Babak in regular touch with educators around the world. Our AELs can share and learn innovative practices that may benefit them as they work in their current roles.  We congratulate you on having such an accomplished educator on your staff, and encourage you take a look at the work that makes Babak a leader in educational technology use.  You can find more information about the individuals in the AEL program at http://www.adobe.com/education/higher-ed/adobe-education-leaders.edu.html.”

Please stop by Babak’s office or make a point to congratulate him on this impressive achievement!

Karl Toepfer Publishes Article in “On Stage Alone”

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Oda Schottmueller performing one of her solo mask dances in Berlin, ca. 1938.

Congratulations“Solo Dancing in Central Europe and Early Modernism,” in On Stage Alone, edited by Claudia Gitelman and Barbara Palfy, University Press of Florida, 2013.

This article discusses different kinds of solo dance and dancers in Central Europe from about 1905 to 1940 and describes the remarkable inventiveness of dancers in developing a mode of dance performance that is now very rare and difficult to master in our time.

http://www.amazon.com/Stage-Alone-Soloists-Modern-Dance/dp/0813040256/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1399495915&sr=1-1&keywords=On+Stage+Alone

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Karl Toepfer Publishes Article in “Metropolenzauber. Sexuelle Moderne und urbaner Wahnsinn”

Congratulations to Karl Toepfer on the publication of: “Perverse Erotik und die Vision der ekstatischen Stadt” (translated into German by Dorothea Loebbermann), in Metropolenzauber. Sexuelle Moderne und urbaner Wahnsinn, edited by Gabriele Tietze and Dorothea Dornhof, Vienna: Bohlau 2014.

This article discusses different approaches to research on perverse sexuality during the Weimar Republic and the discovery that accurate, comprehensive knowledge of the this subject depended on participation in rather than detachment from the forms of behavior the researchers explored.

http://www.amazon.de/Metropolenzauber-Gabriele-Dietze/dp/3205789342/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1399495762&sr=1-1&keywords=metropolenzauber

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“Hero und Leander,” photo by Manasse, Vienna (1930), from Erich Wulffen, Die Erotik in der Photographie, Berlin: Verlag für Kulturforschung (1931), 11. This voluptuously staged photo of a scene from ancient Greek myth nevertheless exudes a seductive aura of modernity as it contrasts the reclining or “defeated” male figure with the rising or “yearning” female figure, reversing the conventional or “classical” representation of “active” male identity contrasted with “passive” female identity. However, the image also suggests that female ascent comes at the sacrifice of male beauty. Unlike much Nacktkultur photography and indeed some artworks of the pre-War era, the staged photography of the Weimar Republic tends to show little, if any, inclination to represent “Adam and Eve” couples who are equal in their emanation of power.

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Karl Toepfer Reviews “New German Dance Studies”

Congratulations Karl Toepfer on the publication of his review!

“The Movement of History in the Movement of Bodies” (review of New German Dance Studies, edited by Susan Manning and Lucia Ruprecht) at H-Net 2014.

https://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.php?id=36587

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Karl Toepfer Publishes Article in “Costume as Cinematic Spectacle”

Alla Nazimova as Salome in the film Salome (1922)

Alla Nazimova as Salome in the film Salome (1922)

Congratulations, Karl Toepfer for your recent publication: “Dance, Fashion and Music Hall Scenes in European Silent Films of the 1920s,” Costume as Cinematic Spectacle, edited by Marta Uhlirova, London: Koening, 2014.

This article discusses the conventions and innovations in the use of costumes to construct dance scenes in European silent films of the 1920s; the article also shows how cinematic techniques operate in relation to choreography and costume choices. The book as a whole contains numerous fascinating articles about costume and fashion in the movies, accompanied by an abundance of luxurious illustrations.

http://www.amazon.com/Birds-Paradise-Costume-Cinematic-Spectacle/dp/3863352181/ref=sr_1_9?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1399495392&sr=1-9&keywords=birds+of+paradise

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