The Irish Dancing : Cultural Politics and Identities, 1900-2000
The Irish Dancing : Cultural Politics and Identities, 1900-2000
Click to enlarge
Author(s): O'Connor, Barbara
ISBN No.: 9781782050414
Pages: 296
Year: 201311
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 66.07
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available

What can Irish dancing bodies tell us about culture, history and politics? Partly thematic, partly chronological, this volume engages with the changing character of cultural identities as danced by the Irish over the course of the twentieth century. It is book-ended by two dance events at either end of the century - the first Irish céilí in London in 1897 and the first performance of Riverdance in Dublin in 1994. Between these two events a range of social/recreational and stage/theatrical dance forms and practices are chosen to explore the ways in which dance has built, transformed and challenged Irish cultural identities. Adopting a critical cultural studies perspective, and based on documentary evidence as well as conversations with dancers, the book explores the diverse ways in which dance produces a sense of national and global, ethnic, gender and social class identities. It does so through an analysis of the power, pleasures and meanings of dance at particular points in time. Themes addressed include the efforts of Cultural Revivalists in the early century to mould an ideal dancing body to reflect the body politic of the newly-formed state; the moral panic that developed around the 'degenerate' modern dances of the 1920s and '30s, and the ensuing power struggle to determine which dances were to be encouraged and which forbidden; the gender politics of dance including the feminisation of step dance, the demonization of the 'modern woman' in the dancehall as well as the pleasures of ballroom dancing for women in the 1940s and '50s; the role of set dancing from the 1970s in creating a sense of community among dancers that combined elements of traditional/rural and newer/postmodern identity formations; how dance helped to maintain a sense of Irish ethnic identity amongst the diaspora who, in transmitting dance from one generation to the next, fulfilled the dual desire to connect with homeland and to foster a sense of ethnic identity in their place of migration; the globalization of Irish step dance in the 1990s and its consequences for a contemporary sense of Irishness. Book jacket.


To be able to view the table of contents for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...
To be able to view the full description for this publication then please subscribe by clicking the button below...