Table of Contents
Acknowledgments An Introduction to Moving BodiesChoreographing HistorySusan Leigh Foster
Resurrecting Historical BodiesToward a Universal Language of Motion: Reflections on a Seventeenth-Century Muscle ManStephen GreenblattInterval TrainingJohn MacAloon
Bodily Interventions into Academic DisciplinesTacit Knowledge, Courtliness, and the Scientist's BodyMario BiagioliMusic, the Pythagoreans, and the BodySusan McClaryAgency and History: The Demands of Dance EthnographyRandy Martin
Moving Theory Across Bodies of PracticeCredit, Novels, MasturbationThomas W. LaqueurAdvertising Every Body: Images from the Japanese Modern YearsMiriam SilverbergBodies of Doctrine: Headshots, Jane Austen, and the Black Indians of Mardi GrasJoseph Roach
Historians as Bodies in MotionModern Dance in the Third Reich: Six Positions and a CodaSusan A. ManningThe Body's Endeavors as Cultural PracticesCynthia J. NovakDifferent Personas: A History of One's Own?Lena Hammergren
Embodying TheoryMeditations on the Patriarchal Pythagorean Pratfall and the Lesbian Siamesia Two-StepSue-Ellen CaseThirteen Ways of Looking at Choreographing WritingPeggy PhelanBodies of Evidence: Law and Order, Sexy Machines, and the Erotics of Fieldwork among PhysicistsSharon TraweekBodies and Their PlotsHayden White
BibliographyNotes on ContributorsIndex