Posts

Showing posts with the label well formed casino

WEEK 1- DEFINITIONS OF SOCIAL DANCE

Image
  ARTICULO EN ESPAÑOL DEFINITIONS OF SOCIAL DANCE (Doctrinal Development – MCC 5.0) By: Yoel Marrero Author of the Método del Cuadro del Casino (MCC) The study of Casino Dance, and Cuban social dances in general, requires a prior conceptual clarification: what do we understand by social dance? In common usage, the term “social dance” is often applied broadly and imprecisely to refer to any form of dance performed in non-theatrical or recreational contexts. However, from the perspective of the Método del Cuadro del Casino (MCC), this generalization is insufficient, as it does not allow us to distinguish between forms of practice that differ substantially in their structure, their transmission, and their level of technical development. For this reason, the MCC proposes a typological classification of social dance into three major categories: Empirical social dance, Hybrid social-performative dance, Academically formalized social dance. This classification is not based on taste, but ...

CHAPTER — RESEARCH METHODOLOGY IN THE MCC

Image
  CHAPTER — RESEARCH METHODOLOGY IN THE MCC Non-Premature Interpretative Closure and Ontological Validation in the Study of Casino Dance 1. Object of the Chapter This chapter establishes the methodological principles of research governing the analysis, definition, and formalization of Casino Dance within the Cuban Casino Square Method (MCC) . Its objective is to define an epistemological protocol that allows: distinguishing between perception and structure, avoiding interpretative drift, ensuring reproducibility of knowledge, and grounding ontological definitions of Casino as a choreographic object. 2. Central Problem Casino Dance, as a cultural phenomenon, has historically been transmitted empirically. This transmission has produced: multiple interpretations, absence of stable structural criteria, confusion between lived experience and object definition, and proliferation of non-verifiable discourses. Common statements include: “Casino belongs to the people and cannot be systema...