How to do things with dance : performing change in postwar America /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Kowal, Rebekah J., author.
Imprint:Middletown, Conn. : Wesleyan University Press, ©2010.
Description:1 online resource (xiii, 323 pages) : illustrations
Language:English
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11261927
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9780819571076
0819571075
9780819568977
081956897X
9780819568984
0819568988
9786613109767
6613109762
Digital file characteristics:data file
Notes:Includes bibliographical references (pages 283-311) and index.
English.
Print version record.
Summary:In postwar America, any assertion of difference from the mainstream anticommunist culture carried professional and personal risks. For this reason, modern dance artists left much of what they thought unsaid. Instead they expressed themselves in movement. How To Do Things with Dance positions modern dance as a vital critical discourse, and suggests that dances of the late 1940s and the 1950s can be seen as compelling agents of social change. Concentrating on choreographers whose artistic work conceived dance in terms of action ... Show moreRebekah J. Kowal shows how specific choreographic projects demonstrated increasing awareness of the stage as a penetrable space, one on which socially suspect or marginalized modes of being could be performed with relative impunity and exerted in the real world. Artists covered include Martha Graham, Jose Limon, Anna Sokolow, Katherine Dunham, Pearl Primus, Merce Cunningham, Paul Taylor, Donald McKayle, Talley Beatty, and Anna Halprin.
Other form:Print version: Kowal, Rebekah J. How to do things with dance. Middletown, Conn. : Wesleyan University Press, ©2010 9780819568977