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Women's Work: Making Dance in Europe before 1800 (Studies in Dance History)
 
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Women's Work: Making Dance in Europe before 1800 (Studies in Dance History) [Paperback]

Lynn Brooks (Editor)

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Book Description

November 28, 2007 Studies in Dance History
Like the history of women, dance has been difficult to capture as a historical subject. Yet in bringing together these two areas of study, the nine internationally renowned scholars in this volume shed new and surprising light on women’s roles as performers of dance, choreographers, shapers of aesthetic trends, and patrons of dance in Italy, France, England, and Germany before 1800.
    Through dance, women asserted power in spheres largely dominated by men: the court, the theater, and the church. As women’s dance worlds intersected with men’s, their lives and visions were supported or opposed, creating a complex politics of creative, spiritual, and political expression. From a women’s religious order in the thirteenth-century Low Countries that used dance as a spiritual rite of passage to the salon culture of eighteenth-century France where dance became an integral part of women’s cultural influence, the writers in this volume explore the meaning of these women’s stories, performances, and dancing bodies, demonstrating that dance is truly a field across which women have moved with finesse and power for many centuries past.
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Editorial Reviews

Review

“A fascinating collection. Women’s work in dance was diverse and influential, and that work is here illuminated with fresh information and keen insights. The authors let the stories of the societies and of the dancers unfold, often with wit and always with authority.”—Sandra Noll Hammond, professor emerita and director of dance, University of  Hawai‘i


 “Ecstatic nuns embodying the anguish of the Lord’s Passion, aristocratic patrons dazzling Renaissance courts with their munificence, dancers rescued from anonymity by the fortuitous discovery of a role and a surname, ballerinas who used or didn't use their sexual charms to fulfill the promise of their talents—they all come alive in these pages, as actors and agents in their own right.  Brooks’ volume is a long-overdue corrective to the male-centered narratives of Western theatrical dance in the early centuries of its development.”—Lynn Garafola, professor of dance, Barnard College


“Women’s Work is a welcome addition to the sparse body of scholarly work that concentrates on dance practices and the accomplishments of women before 1800. But this intriguing volume is also replete with thought-provoking discussions that resonate far beyond its early dance time frame, probing issues that are well worthy of discussion within the larger framework of dance history.”—Elizabeth Aldrich
--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

About the Author

Lynn Matluck Brooks is the Arthur and Katherine Shadek Professor of Humanities and Dance and chair of the Department of Theater, Dance, and Film at Franklin and Marshall College. She has written several books, including The Art of Dancing in Seventeenth-Century Spain.

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