This
paper discusses Isadora Duncan's book "My Life" and her life in relationship to 'Section I' of Walt Whitman's
poem "Song of the Open Road", which Duncan professes to be her favorite poem, probably because it reveals Duncan's specific
philosophies of
freedom and
dance. The author points out that, in her life as a mother, a lover and a wife and her work as a dancer, who developed modern dance, Duncan broke away from conventional views seeking freedom from social and professional taboos and constraints. The paper stresses that
nature is Duncan's source of technique and dance content in which she expresses unbound freedom through her use of arms and upper body movements combined with simple steps, a
style which Duncan intended to be the divine expression through the body of the human spirit.
More summaries about the Isadora Duncan's "My Life"