Dancing Many Drums: Excavations In African American Dance

Dancing Many Drums: Excavations In African American Dance

by Thomas F. Defrantz
Dancing Many Drums: Excavations In African American Dance

Dancing Many Drums: Excavations In African American Dance

by Thomas F. Defrantz

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Overview

Few will dispute the profound influence that African American music and movement has had in American and world culture. Dancing Many Drums explores that influence through a groundbreaking collection of essays on African American dance history, theory, and practice. In so doing, it reevaluates "black" and "African American " as both racial and dance categories. Abundantly illustrated, the volume includes images of a wide variety of dance forms and performers, from ring shouts, vaudeville, and social dances to professional dance companies and Hollywood movie dancing.

Bringing together issues of race, gender, politics, history, and dance, Dancing Many Drums ranges widely, including discussions of dance instruction songs, the blues aesthetic, and Katherine Dunham’s controversial ballet about lynching, Southland. In addition, there are two photo essays: the first on African dance in New York by noted dance photographer Mansa Mussa, and another on the 1934 "African opera," Kykunkor, or the Witch Woman.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299173135
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 04/01/2002
Series: Studies in Dance History , #19
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 384
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Thomas F. DeFrantz is associate professor of music and theater arts at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is the author of Dancing Revelations: Alvin Ailey’s Embodiment of African American Culture (Oxford U Press, 2004). In addition to scholarly articles, he has written on dance for the Village Voice and Philadelphia Inquirer. He is a dancer and choreographer and for many years directed the dance history program at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center in New York City.

Table of Contents

Contents Preface Acknowledgments African American Dance: A Complex History Part 1. Theory 1. Christian Conversion and the Challenge of Dance 2. Dance and Identity Politics in American Negro Vaudeville: The Whitman Sisters, 1900–1935 3. Awkward Moves: Dance Lessons from the 1940s 4. (Up)Staging the Primitive: Pearl Primus and ‘‘the Negro Problem’’ in American Dance Part 2. Practice 5. African Dance in New York City 6. From ‘‘Messin’ Around’’ to ‘‘FunkyWestern Civilization’’: The Rise and Fall of Dance Instruction Songs 7. ‘‘Moves on Top of Blues’’: Dianne McIntyre’s Blues Aesthetic Part 3. History 8. Kykunkor, or the Witch Woman: An African Opera in America, 1934 9. Between Two Eras: ‘‘Norton and Margot’’ in the Afro-American EntertainmentWorld 10. Katherine Dunham’s Southland: Protest in the Face of Repression 11. The New York Negro Ballet in Great Britain Contributors Index
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