|
Showing 1 - 4 of
4 matches in All Departments
Dancers as Diplomats chronicles the role of dance and dancers in
American cultural diplomacy. In the early decades of the Cold War
and the twenty-first century, American dancers toured the globe on
tours sponsored by the US State Department. Dancers as Diplomats
tells the story of how these tours in shaped and some times
re-imagined ideas of America in unexpected, often sensational
circumstances-pirouetting in Moscow as the Cuban Missile Crisis
unfolded and dancing in Burma in the days just before the country
held its first democratic elections. Based on more than seventy
interviews with dancers who traveled on the tours, the book looks
at a wide range of American dance companies, among them New York
City Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Martha Graham
Dance Company, Urban Bush Women, ODC/Dance, Ronald K.
Brown/Evidence, and the Trey McIntyre Project, among others. These
companies traveled the world. During the Cold War, they dance
everywhere from the Soviet Union during the Cold War to Vietnam
just months before the US abandoned Saigon. In the post 9/11 era,
they traveled to Asia and Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa and the
Middle East.
If we imagine multiple ways of being together, how might that shift
choreographic practices and help us imagine ways groups assemble in
more varied ways than just pairing another man with another woman?
How might dancing queerly ask us to imagine futures through
something other than heterosexuality and reproduction? How does
challenging gender binaries always mean thinking about race,
thinking about the postcolonial, about ableism? What are the
arbitrary rules structuring dance in all its arenas, whether
concert and social or commercial and competition, and how do we see
those invisible structures and work to disrupt them? Queer Dance
brings together artists and scholars in a multi-platformed
project-book, accompanying website, and live performance series to
ask, "How does dancing queerly progressively challenge us?" The
artists and scholars whose writing appears in the book and whose
performances and filmed interviews appear online stage a range of
genders and sexualities that challenge and destabilize social
norms. Engaging with dance making, dance scholarship, queer
studies, and other fields, Queer Dance asks how identities,
communities, and artmaking and scholarly practices might consider
what queer work the body does and can do. There is great power in
claiming queerness in the press of bodies touching or in the
exceeding of the body best measured in sweat and exhaustion. How
does queerness exist in the realm of affect and touch, and what
then might we explore about queerness through these pleasurable and
complex bodily ways of knowing?
If we imagine multiple ways of being together, how might that shift
choreographic practices and help us imagine ways groups assemble in
more varied ways than just pairing another man with another woman?
How might dancing queerly ask us to imagine futures through
something other than heterosexuality and reproduction? How does
challenging gender binaries always mean thinking about race,
thinking about the postcolonial, about ableism? What are the
arbitrary rules structuring dance in all its arenas, whether
concert and social or commercial and competition, and how do we see
those invisible structures and work to disrupt them? Queer Dance
brings together artists and scholars in a multi-platformed
project-book, accompanying website, and live performance series to
ask, "How does dancing queerly progressively challenge us?" The
artists and scholars whose writing appears in the book and whose
performances and filmed interviews appear online stage a range of
genders and sexualities that challenge and destabilize social
norms. Engaging with dance making, dance scholarship, queer
studies, and other fields, Queer Dance asks how identities,
communities, and artmaking and scholarly practices might consider
what queer work the body does and can do. There is great power in
claiming queerness in the press of bodies touching or in the
exceeding of the body best measured in sweat and exhaustion. How
does queerness exist in the realm of affect and touch, and what
then might we explore about queerness through these pleasurable and
complex bodily ways of knowing?
Dancers as Diplomats chronicles the role of dance and dancers in
American cultural diplomacy. In the early decades of the Cold War
and the twenty-first century, American dancers toured the globe on
tours sponsored by the US State Department. Dancers as Diplomats
tells the story of how these tours in shaped and some times
re-imagined ideas of America in unexpected, often sensational
circumstances-pirouetting in Moscow as the Cuban Missile Crisis
unfolded and dancing in Burma in the days just before the country
held its first democratic elections. Based on more than seventy
interviews with dancers who traveled on the tours, the book looks
at a wide range of American dance companies, among them New York
City Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Martha Graham
Dance Company, Urban Bush Women, ODC/Dance, Ronald K.
Brown/Evidence, and the Trey McIntyre Project, among others. These
companies traveled the world. During the Cold War, they dance
everywhere from the Soviet Union during the Cold War to Vietnam
just months before the US abandoned Saigon. In the post 9/11 era,
they traveled to Asia and Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa and the
Middle East.
|
|