I really enjoyed this weeks’ focus. The guided activity and
the readings focused on dance. I am not a dancer, however I am enrolled in
DANC200 this semester. Before this class, I never realized the importance of
dance; I knew dance was entertaining and a form of expression but I didn’t
realize the impact it can have on people’s lives. In the beginning of the
semester, we had to define dance. I simply defined dance as an art form.
However, I soon realized that dance has many aspects to it. We attended a dance
event a few weeks ago that focused on preventing abuse to women. The women told
a story through their dance and expressed their strength and power. I believe
all of this relates to the assignments this week because I was able to
understand what the Urban Bush Women (UBW) were trying to express through
dance.
When
exploring the website, I focused on the UBW’s core values. I really believe
that these core values were represented and expressed in every dance that I
watched. The core values include: validating the individual, catalyzing for
social change, building trust through process, entering community and co-creating
stories, celebrating the movement and culture of the African Diaspora, and
recognizing that place matters. The women in the group displayed pride in their
heritage and similar to the dance group I witnessed for class, they expressed
strength and power.
I
was extremely shocked when I watched “Batty Moves.” Compared to the dances that
I had watched prior, this dance was very revealing and somewhat scandalous. The
dance involved a lot of movements relating to the hips and butt and the outfits
were somewhat revealing. However, after I read, “Memory Walking with Urban
Bush’s Batty Moves,” I realized the meaning
of the dance. I would not consider the dance to be vulgar because the point of
the dance was for the women to embrace their bodies and take pride in them. The
dance displayed the women’s strength. The author mentions, “Their costumes
hinted at what they intended to do--- kick butts!” I also found it very
interesting that each dancer “sang their versions of the song, sharing their
African American heritage but also emphasizing their own identities to
illustrate both individual and collective identities as women of the African Diaspora.”
The author even mentions the significance of the dance and how it reminded her
of the childhood games that she experienced in Ghana. When first viewing this
dance, one might believe that it is vulgar and inappropriate, however upon
further analysis, it genuinely has a lot of meaning. An interviewee said, “African
people’s movements have often been described as “lewd and lascivious” by
European Americans because we comfortably use pelvic movements in all sorts of
dances from the sacred to the flirtatious to the boldly sensual. As African
people in the United States, we developed an “in-your-face” approach to our
desire to continue our movement traditions of the hips. We developed defiance
and resistance to ideas of cultural domination and we carried it in our hips.”
I
also enjoyed reading, “Sexual Politics.” The first sentence really stuck out to
me. It read, “Recent feminist scholarship tends to proceed on the assumption
that history is really his story—an account of the past written by or about
men.” However, modern and post modern dance are the only major art forms in
which “the creators, the consolidators, and the second and third generation
innovators have almost all been women.” Despite this fact, this might not
necessarily be something to celebrate. The author includes, “The fact that it’s
difficult to name a major male choreographer who isn’t also homosexual suggests
that the art of dance has been, and to a large extent still is, shunned by
heterosexual males who regard it as a womanly activity. However, this makes no
sense to me. Dancers are considered good due to years of practice, not because
of their gender. The author then focuses on the constraints placed on women in
the past. Duncan danced without a corset in order to rebel against its meaning.
The author mentions, “She rebelled not only against the corset per se, but also
against everything it symbolized: the constraints—both physical and
psychological—imposed upon women by Victorian Culture.” I believe this aspect
of the reading ties in with the UBW. The UBW dance for a purpose. They tell
stories when they dance and display their strength and power throughout their
dances. Dance is more than what you’re wearing, it’s about the significance and
importance of your movements and the stories and emotions that they evoke.
I agree with Abby when she said that she was shocked by the dance "Batty Moves" performed by UBW. I too was very surprised by their costumes and how little clothing they were wearing compared to the other videos we watched. I was also surprised by the provocative dance moves they were doing in this video compared to the rest. I also agree with Abby that i would not consider this dance to be an exotic dance because this dance told the story of how women should not be ashamed of their bodies and that they should take pride in them. I also found it interested that in the article "Sexual Politics" men who choreograph dances and those that are dancers are considered to be homosexual. Dance is one of the few things in this world that is considered feminine instead of masculine.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Abby and Jennifer i was also shocked by the "Batty Moves" performances. I also never saw dance as a form of art until I watched these dances and talked about it in lecture. I see how dance is more then just a form of expression its a way to get messages across to people. After reading about the "Batty Moves" dances I started to understand why these women do this type of dancing. They embrace themselves just as Abby has said. They are expressing who they are and showing everyone that they are not afraid to be themselves. This is a very powerful message for women everywhere. I think Abby makes a good argument about how these dance moves are important and mean something to a lot of different people.
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