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  • Modern Moves: Dancing Race during the Ragtime and Jazz Eras

    Modern Moves by Robinson, Danielle;

    Dancing Race during the Ragtime and Jazz Eras

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 40.99
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        19 582 Ft (18 650 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    19 582 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 20 August 2015

    • ISBN 9780199779222
    • Binding Paperback
    • No. of pages224 pages
    • Size 155x231x17 mm
    • Weight 295 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 17 b&w halftones
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    Short description:

    Modern Moves examines the movement of social dances between black and white cultural groups and immigrant and migrant communities during the early twentieth century. It focuses on Manhattan, a Black Atlantic capital into which diverse people and dances flowed and intermingled, and out of which new dances were marketed globally.

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    Long description:

    Modern Moves traces the movement of American social dance styles between black and white cultural groups and between immigrant and migrant communities during the early twentieth century. Its central focus is New York City, where the confluence of two key demographic streams - an influx of immigrants from Eastern Europe and the growth of the city's African American community particularly as it centered Harlem - created the conditions of possibility for hybrid dance forms like blues, ragtime, ballroom, and jazz dancing. Author Danielle Robinson illustrates how each of these forms came about as the result of the co-mingling of dance traditions from different cultural and racial backgrounds in the same urban social spaces. The results of these cross-cultural collisions in New York City, as she argues, were far greater than passing dance trends; they in fact laid the foundation for the twentieth century's social dancing practices throughout the United States.

    By looking at dance as social practice across conventional genre and race lines, this book demonstrates that modern social dancing, like Western modernity itself, was dependent on the cultural production and labor of African diasporic peoples -- even as they were excluded from its rewards. A cornerstone in Robinson's argument is the changing role of the dance instructor, which was transformed from the proprietor of a small-scale, local dance school at the end of the nineteenth century to a member of a distinct, self-identified social industry at the beginning of the twentieth. Whereas dance studies has been slow to connect early twentieth century dancing with period racial politics, Modern Moves departs radically from prior scholarship on the topic, and in so doing, revises social and African American dance history of this period. Recognizing the rac(ial)ist beginnings of contemporary American social dancing, it offers a window into the ways that dancing throughout the twentieth century has provided a key means through which diverse groups of people have navigated shifting socio-political relations through their bodily movement.

    Modern Moves asserts that the social practice of modern dancing, with its perceived black origins, empowered displaced people such as migrants and immigrants to grapple with the effects of industrialization, urbanization, and the rise of North American modernity. Far more than simple appropriation, the selling and practicing of "black" dances during the 1910s and 1920s reinforced whiteness as the ideal racial status in America through embodied and rhetorical engagements with period black stereotypes.

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    Table of Contents:

    Acknowledgements
    Preface
    Introduction
    1. Let's Go Back Home: The Slow Drag, Black Migration, and the Birth of Black Harlem
    2. A Colorful Nightmare: Immigrant Ragtime Dancing as Participatory Minstrelsy
    3. The Ugly Duckling: The Refinement of Ragtime Dancing and the Mass Marketing of Modern Social Dance
    4. The Eclipse: Modern Ballroom Dancing, Bodily Code Switching, and the Harlem Renaissance
    5. Ragtime Legacies: Appropriation, Authenticity, and Opportunity
    Conclusion

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