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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
“Dancing possesses all the features of a beautiful language, yet it is not sufficient to know the alphabet alone. But when a man of genius arranges the letters to form words and connects the words to form sentences, it will cease to be dumb, it will speak with both strength and energy; and the ballets will share with the best plays the merits of affecting and moving”
(Noverre, 1760; cited in Copeland & Cohen, 1983. p. 290)
“I should like to emphasise that some of the clinical pictures outlined are no more than attempts to present part of the material observed in a communicable form”
(Kraepelin, 1920; cited in Hafner et al, 1987, pp. 29–38)
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