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However, one could also speak about a world-making by dance and choreography which occurs through the body and through movement. Gabriele Klein: “As a world of the body and the senses, of movement and feelings, as a world of metaphors, for which words fail us, dance in the modern age, according to the modern dance discourse, constitutes an alternative world, namely a world beyond language and rationality.” (Klein 2011, 17) In this ensemble of discourses – not by chance either – dance was constituted as “the other”. But art can be thought inverted. Jacques Rancière understands art and politics as connected with each other, two forms of the distribution of the sensual, an indication of how closely – much opposed to a separated thinking – the sensual-physical, the perception of movement is interwoven with the production of culture, sociality, and politics (Rancière 1991). Art is “neither political due to the message it conveys, nor because of the way it represents and reflects social structures, political conflicts, or social, ethnic, and sexual identities. Art is political first of all because it creates a spatio-temporal sensorium that determines certain ways of being together or separated, of being inside or outside, opposite or in the middle. Art is political in that it portions a certain space and a certain time” (Ranciére 2006,, 77).