Queer Dance

Queer Dance

Queer Dance

Queer Dance

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

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?

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199377336
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 04/28/2017
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 686,504
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.20(h) x 1.00(d)

About the Author

Clare Croft is a dance historian, theorist, dramaturg, and curator. She is the editor and curator of Queer Dance, and the author of Dancers as Diplomats. Her writing about dance and performance has appeared in academic journals, including Theatre Journal and Dance Research Journal, and she has been a regular contributor to a number of newspapers, including The Washington Post and the Austin American-Statesman. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Dance at the University of Michigan, where she teaches in the BFA and MFA Dance programs.

Table of Contents

Introduction
Clare Croft

Section 1: Queering the Stage

1. To Be A Showboy
Lou Henry Hoover

2. "Our Love was not Enough": Queering Gender, Cultural Belonging, and Desire in Contemporary Abhinaya
Sandra Chatterjee and Cynthia Ling Lee

3. Women Dancing Otherwise: The Queer Feminism of Gu Jiani's Right & Left
Emily E. Wilcox

4. The Hysterical Spectator: Dancing with Feminists, Nellies, Andro-dykes and Drag Queens
Doran George

5. Chasing Feathers: Jerome Bel, Swan Lake, and the Alternative Futures of Re-enacted Dance
Julian B. Carter

6. Dancing Marines and Pumping Gasoline: Coded Queerness in Depression-era American Ballet
Jennifer L. Campbell

7. Queer Spaces in Anna Sokolow's Rooms
Hannah Kosstrin

Section 2: Dancing Toward a Queer Sociality

8. queer dance in three acts thomas f. defrantz

9. In Praise of Latin Night at the Queer Club
Justin Torres

10. An Buachaillín Bán: Reflections on One Queer's Performance within Traditional Irish Music & Dance
Nicholas Gareiss

11. Aunty Fever: A Queer Impression
Kareem Khubchandani

12. Last Cowboy Standing: Testing a Critical Choreographic Inquiry
Peter Carpenter

13. RMW(a) & RMW from the inside out
Jennifer Monson

Section 3: Intimacy

14. Futari Tomo: A Queer Duet for Taiko
Angela K. Ahlgren

15. "Oh No! Not This Lesbian Again": The Punany Poets Queer the Pimp-Ho Aesthetic
Raquel L. Monroe

16. Choreographing the Chronic
Patrick McKelvey

17. Expressing Life Through Loss: On Queens That Fall With A Freak Technique
Anna Martine Whitehead

References
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