When Words are Inadequate Modern Dance and Transnationalism in China / Nan Ma.

Author/creator Ma, Nan
Other author Oxford University Press.
Format Electronic
Publication InfoNew York : Oxford University Press, [2023]
Descriptionxiv, 278 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm.
Supplemental ContentFull text available from Oxford Scholarship Online
Subjects

Portion of title Modern Dance and Transnationalism in China
SeriesOxford studies in dance theory series
Contents Traveling princess and dancing diplomat: Yu Rongling, Corporeal Modernity, and Isadora Duncan -- Transmediating kinesthesia: Wu Xiaobang, Mary Wigman via Tokyo, and modern dance in wartime China -- Dancing reclusion in the great leap forward: conflicting utopias and Wu Xiaobang's "New Classical Dance" -- Writing dance: Dai Ailian, labanotation, and the multi-diasporic "root" of modern Chinese ethnic dance -- Epilogue: Guo Mingda, Alwin Nikolais, and the (anti-)American link.
Abstract "By that time, Duncan had commenced her experiment on "Greek dance" (later known as early modern dance), often performing in the semi-private salons of her patrons, a close circle of wealthy noble American Grecophile expatriates. Though yet to make a name for her dance, Duncan had already become a controversial figure in the Parisian upper-class society, as she danced in ancient Greek-style tunic that highlighted "her lightly-clad, bare-limbed female body." Sometime around 1902, Yu Rongling took a major role, as a certain "goddess" from Greek mythology, in one of Duncan's Greek dramatic dances performed either publicly or semi-publicly in Paris. A teenaged girl from the Manchu court of the Qing Empire-characteristically depicted by the Western press as backward, conservative, and xenophobic-danced gracefully as a Greek goddess, barefoot and thinly-clad, in front of a Parisian upper-class audience. This dancing cosmopolitan figure, characterized by temporal, racial, and geo-cultural hybridity, could be norm-defying for the audience at the turn of the century who had just witnessed the end of the Victorian era. Note that about a mere year earlier, when Duncan first performed in Parisian salons, her solo body and simple tunic shocked her unprepared elite audiences "accustomed to very different styles of dance and performance" (such as Anna Pavlova's classical ballet and Loïe Fuller's skirt dance), let alone the broader audiences at high art theaters"-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references and index.
Access restrictionAvailable only to authorized users.
Technical detailsMode of access: World Wide Web
Genre/formElectronic books.
LCCN 2022050269
ISBN9780197575314 (paperback)
ISBN9780197575307 (hardcover)
ISBN(epub)
ISBN(ebook)

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