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Fifty Contemporary Choreographers (Routledge Key Guides)
 
 

Fifty Contemporary Choreographers (Routledge Key Guides) [Paperback]

Martha Bremser (Editor), Lorna Sanders (Editor)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

0415103649 978-0415103640 August 6, 1999
Fifty Contemporary Choreographers provides a unique guide to some of today's most important dance-makers. Each entry includes: a biographical section a chronological list of works a detailed bibliography a critical essay Thus, instead of just presenting the facts, the entries in this book locate each choreographer's style and influence within the development of contemporary dance. The range of entries is impressively broad, spanning ballet, 'contemporary' and post-modern, and has an international scope. Fifty Contemporary Choreographers is an invaluable guide for all students and critics, dancers and general readers. Contributors include: Dale Harris, Alan Robertson, Stephanie Jordan, George Dorris, Robert Giskovic, Joan Acocella, Heidi Gilpin, Ann Copper Albright, Katie Matheson Dale Harris, Alan Robertson, Stephanie Jordan, George Dorris, Robert Giskovic, Joan Acocella, Hedi Gilpin, Ann Copper Albright, Katie Matheson

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Editorial Reviews

Review

[A]n impressive array of thirty-one contributors... The exemplary Introduction provided by Deborah Jowitt, amounts to a concise overview of modern dance and other movements, such as post modern dance, which are often included within that convenient, early 20th century term. A glance at the Table of Contents indicates the dazzling range of diversity among the choreographers selected for publication. [A] researcher seeking solid information on Mats Ek, Karole Armitage or Lar Lubovitch will find answers to immediate questions and guides to deeper study. This well-organized guide will find a welcome place in any reference collection devoted to the performing arts, and as television and videos make dance more accessible, reference librarians in general situations might be approached by patrons wanting to know more about Mark Morris or Matthew Bourne. Fifty Contemporary Choreographers provides the answers. It's a gem and one that responds to a real need..
Broadside

Their essays offer cogent, incisive analyses of a choreographer's work. Although a reference book Fifty Contemporary Choreographers is well worth reading straight through for a concise overview of the state of British, American, and Western European dance today. This work is recommended for collections with an interest in contemporary dance..
American Reference Books Annual, 2000

About the Author

Martha Bremser is an internationally respected writer on dance. Among her other works are the acclaimed International Dictionary of Ballet (1992).

Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Routledge (August 6, 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0415103649
  • ISBN-13: 978-0415103640
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.9 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,368,250 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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2.0 out of 5 stars Random selection, November 9, 2011
By 
Royd Climenhaga (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
This may as well be called 50 Random Choreographers. If you were to put a bunch of names in a hat and pull them out at random, you are bound to come up with a Cunningham here and a Forsythe there, but would be bound to miss whole swaths of what are described in Jowitt's introduction as the most important choreographers of the second half of the 20th Century (no Pina Bausch?). (I may be biased, having published on Pina Bausch, but I don't think ranking her work as among the most influential of the 20th century would be a stretch in any consideration Similarly, there is a fair representation of Judson era post-modern dance (Trisha Brown, Steve Paxton, etc.), but no Yvonne Rainer? And anything that might veer too far toward the ballet end of the spectrum is simply ignored. OK, Forsythe is here and Jiri Kylian, but no Chris Wheldon? no Balanchine? Maybe the editors had their reasons for omitting certain people, but they do not adequately explain their strategy. They claim they wanted "to suggest a range (geographical and stylistic) of dance phenomena" from Dance in New York in the 1950s (? that would be Martha Graham, Balanchine, Anna Sokolow, etc., none of whom are included here. Maybe they mean New York in the 1960s), British new dance, French nouvelle danse, "and those areas where dance merges into other forms, such as opera, drama, performance art and installation"(no Sasha Waltz, Meg Stuart, etc.) This book fails on all those accounts.

A selection like this is bound to be incomplete and skewed, there will always be people left out, and so a pointed editorial eye is necessary, and an explanation for the choices that were made vital. If this book told a different story, that would be fine, but in trying to tell the story described in the editor's minimal introduction, they fail. Including an introduction from Deborah Jowitt helps immensely, but her run down of twentieth century dance also shows everything this book lacks. Jowitt describes the influence of earlier Modern Dance and German Expressionism, which is not contained here. She highlights Cunningham's important influence, which is here, but also brings out the influence of German Tanztheater and Butoh, which are sadly lacking from this volume. Disappointing, as a more comprehensive overview of dance and choreographers is needed right now. Many of the entries are fine in and of themselves, but I can't see how I would use this book in a classroom setting with the gaps it entails, and it's not at all useful for personal reference given the necessary rudimentary overviews it provides.

I should note that my review is in response to the 2nd edition of this book. Evidently the first edition covers different artists, and to my mind does a slightly better job of covering some of the basic omissions in the second volume. Maybe the editors felt that after almost 10 years Pina Bausch, Carolyn Carlson, Laura Dean, Douglas Dunn, Eiko and Koma, David Gordon and Kazuo Ohno (all cut from the first volume) were no longer contemporary. A few of those have died, but if that was the cut off, why wasn't that mentioned, and just because they may have died, their work is still very present and influential to the current generation. Merce Cunningham has died, but his work is still included and lauded, as it should be. I just don't understand the rationale for who is left out and who makes the grade.
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0 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Greeeeat!!!!!!!!!!!!, December 29, 2007
This review is from: Fifty Contemporary Choreographers (Routledge Key Guides) (Paperback)
I am very satisfied with Amazon. I was able to finish my project on time thanks for the prompt delivery of this item.

Thanks

Juan
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In 1975, the erudite and cantankerous Lincoln Kirstein delivered the following broadside against the 'soi-disant "modern"-dance': 'Essentially, the modern dance tradition is a meager school and is without audience, repertory, or issue; it never gained a mass public, a central system, nor a common repertory ...'. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
mus percussion, contemporary dance theatre, freelance choreographer, first choreography, associate choreographer, resident choreographer, contact improvisation, chief choreographer, guest choreographer, postmodern dance, contemporary choreographers, ice dance, other choreographers, dance vocabulary, choreographic process, many choreographers, choreographic style, movement vocabulary, own choreography, dance critic, dance company, ballet technique, dance project, movement phrases, pointe shoes
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Dance Magazine, Dance Theatre Journal, Merce Cunningham, United States, Ballett International, Ballet Review, Martha Graham, Trisha Brown, Allen Robertson, Pina Bausch, Arlene Croce, Dancing Times, Paul Taylor, Steve Reich, Ballet News, Royal Ballet, Mark Morris, Philip Glass, Thom Willems, Alastair Macaulay, Michael Clark, Steve Paxton, John Cage, Richard Alston
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