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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating look at dance cultural politics in the 50s and 60s,
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This review is from: Dance for Export: Cultural Diplomacy and the Cold War (Studies in Dance History) (Paperback)
This book gives an in-depth analysis of the decision-makers who played a most important role in the development of the cultural politics of dance from the 1950s into the 60s. Which companies and solo dancers/choreographers were selected for "export" and which were not set some of the standards for subsidizing for years to come. The book concentrates primarily on officially sanctioned and endorsed groups and individuals, although there were certainly many others who went abroad independently and made significant inroads into the world of international dance.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Dance as an instrument of foreign policy,
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This review is from: Dance for Export: Cultural Diplomacy and the Cold War (Studies in Dance History) (Paperback)
Long a champion of fine arts, Professor Naima Prevots has achieved a tour de force with this book: Dance for Export; Cultural Diplomacy and the Cold War. Here a serious scholar will find stunning reportage on many aspects of dance as a form of performing art. For this present review we can focus advantageously on three aspects: diplomacy, history, aesthetics.
In her "Prologue," Dr. Prevots sets the scene for diplomacy found in international politics during the decade shortly after the end of World War II. The Eisenhower presidency was a period early in the tension between major world powers of that era. Ideology was a matter of central concern for protagonists, the United States and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. An impasse of policy was seen in threat analysis focused on mutual assured destruction in nuclear warfare to temper any projection of power. We see an emergence of dance as an instrument of foreign policy for the U.S. Excellence in writing history is measured in attention to detail as one element and here we see our author's forceful scholarship in action. Important persons in government and art are identified. Events and decisions are identified thoroughly so that we have a source book in politics and management as well as in the structure and content of dance in that era of the Cold War. We have the facts presented in a vivid and flowing style that holds a reader's attention. In this vivid integration of relevant details we have a view with results of probing analysis made coherent from disparate, less known archives. Dr. Prevots adds to her larger achievement some aesthetic observations to give insight into dance as a form of fine art. She says of Martha Graham's Appalachian Spring: "The work was about love's joys and fears, and about the emotional confrontation between new frontiers and established boundaries." We see here a lead into thematic apperception of this art work. Later our author aptly cites a poem of Walt Whitman to take a theme of "athletic democracy" into a discussion of exporting dance from Native Americans. Dance for Export includes a splendid collection of photographs to heighten the impact of our author's panoramic perspective. Scholars in many disciplines can learn from this distinctive work. Insights for ethics, politics, management, dance and human nature are produced in abundance. Connoisseurs of foreign policy and dance alike will find much of perennial interest in this work. Claude Prevots An eclectic eye |
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Dance for Export: Cultural Diplomacy and the Cold War (Studies in Dance History) by Naima Prevots (Hardcover - April 16, 1999)
$40.00
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