
Social Choreography
Ideology as Performance in Dance and Everyday Movement
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
Social Choreography
Ideology as Performance in Dance and Everyday Movement
About this book
Hewitt focuses on the period between the mid-nineteenth century and the early twentieth and considers dancers and social theorists in Germany, Britain, France, and the United States. Analyzing the arguments of writers including Friedrich Schiller, Theodor Adorno, Hans Brandenburg, Ernst Bloch, and Siegfried Kracauer, he reveals in their thinking about the movement of bodies a shift from an understanding of play as the condition of human freedom to one prioritizing labor as either the realization or alienation of embodied human potential. Whether considering understandings of the Charleston, Isadora Duncan, Nijinsky, or the famous British chorus line the Tiller Girls, Hewitt foregrounds gender as he uses dance and everyday movement to rethink the relationship of aesthetics and social order.
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Information
Table of contents
- Contents
- Introduction: Social Choreography andthe Aesthetic Continuum
- The Body of Marsyas: Aesthetic Socialism andthe Physiology of the Sublime
- Stumbling and Legibility:Gesture and the Dialectic of Tact
- ‘‘America Makes Me Sick!’’: Nationalism, Race,Gender, and Hysteria
- The Scandalous Male Icon: Nijinsky and the Queeringof Symbolist Aesthetics
- From Woman to Girl:Mass Culture and Gender Panic
- Notes
- Index