Curtain up.In 1967, when the Civil Rights Movement was in full force, DANCE MAGAZINE came out with a cover that caused a bit of a stir. It pictured Arthur Mitchell Noun 1. Arthur Mitchell - United States dancer who formed the first Black classical ballet company (born in 1934) Mitchell and Mimi Paul in Jacques d'Amboise's Othello, staring into each other's eyes. To see that cover now, it looks sweet and mild, with a hint of romance. But dancer and scholar Judith Brin Ingber, who had just taken a job as an editorial assistant at Dance Magazine, remembers the angry letters she had to answer from subscribers who were upset to see a black man and a white woman pictured together. Have we come a long way? Yes. Obviously. And yet plenty of dancers still feel the burn of discrimination, from being shut out of certain roles to facing insidious insidious /in·sid·i·ous/ (-sid´e-us) coming on stealthily; of gradual and subtle development. in·sid·i·ous adj. Being a disease that progresses with few or no symptoms to indicate its gravity. assumptions about their abilities and style. Race is an issue that doesn't get talked about enough--at least not beyond the comfort zones. To help fill that gap, we are devoting most of our pages this month to the subject of race. You could call this the race issue issue. Now, 38 years after that controversial cover, the demographics of the dance world in the U.S. have changed. Through a surge of immigration immigration, entrance of a person (an alien) into a new country for the purpose of establishing permanent residence. Motives for immigration, like those for migration generally, are often economic, although religious or political factors may be very important. , we have not only white and black dancers, but also many more Latino and Asian dancers. "Beyond Tokenism to·ken·ism n. 1. The policy of making only a perfunctory effort or symbolic gesture toward the accomplishment of a goal, such as racial integration. 2. : When Diversity Is Part of the Art" interviews choreographers This is a list of choreographers A
Recently I was in a studio improvising with a dance colleague. As I knelt knelt v. A past tense and a past participle of kneel. knelt Verb the past of kneel knelt kneel to set down a prop, he said, "Oh don't do it that way--it looks so white." Though both of us are white, I knew exactly what he meant. My legs were close together in a narrow base, and my torso upright--sort of dainty. I had done it before with a wider base, legs squatting squatting /squat·ting/ (skwaht´ing) a position with hips and knees flexed, the buttocks resting on the heels; sometimes adopted by the parturient at delivery or by children with certain types of cardiac defects. wide, chest leaning forward, and he preferred that version. Whiteness has its own characteristics and can be looked at and labeled in the same way as other culturally specific dancing. Author Brenda Dixon Gottschild breaks it down in her essay "Whoa! Whiteness in Dance." She intentionally treads a fine line between analyzing and stereotyping, but she demonstrates that no one race has a corner on "normality normality, in chemistry: see concentration. ." At Dance Magazine we want to open up the conversation on race, and that means listening to other dancers' experiences. Considering the potentially explosive nature of people's feelings about race, the dancers interviewed in this issue are remarkably straightforward and honest. Please listen--and read--and continue the conversation with the dance artists in your own circles. In order to move forward, we need to accept--no, celebrate--the gloriousness that diversity brings to our art. |
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