ABSTRACT

This edited collection charts the development of contemporary dance in Central and Eastern Europe since the literal and symbolic revolutions of 1989.

Central Europe and the former Soviet Bloc countries were a major presence in dance – particularly theatrical dance – throughout the twentieth century. With the fragmentation of traditional structures in the final decade of the century came a range of aesthetic and ideological responses from dance practitioners. These ranged from attempts to reform classical ballet to struggles for autonomy from the state, and the nature of each was influenced by a set of contexts and circumstances particular to each country.

Each contribution covers the strategies of a different country’s dance practitioners, using a similar structure in order to invite comparisons. In general, they address:

  • Historical context, showing the roots of contemporary dance forms
  • The socio-political climates that influenced emerging companies and forms
  • The relationships between aesthetic exploration and institutional patronage
  • The practitioners who were central to the development of dance in each country
  • A diagnosis of the current state of the art and how it has come about

The book’s main through-line is the concept of community, and how all of the different approaches that it documents have in some way engaged with this notion, consciously or otherwise. This can take the form of oppositional relationships, institutional formations, or literally, in identifiable communities of dancers and choreographers.

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

(Editorial)

chapter |6 pages

Communitas

Introduction (theoretical)

chapter 1|14 pages

The Polish periphery in ‘native' Europe

Towards the institutionalisation of dance

chapter 2|17 pages

Toward autonomy and professionalization

The process of negotiating the identity of Polish dance

chapter 3|11 pages

Not quite – not right

Eastern/Western dance (on contemporary dance in Serbia)

chapter 4|8 pages

Evacuate the area

Zero space

chapter 6|16 pages

The present absence

Approaches to dance and choreography in Slovenian contemporary dance

chapter 7|16 pages

Contemporary dance in Lithuania

chapter 8|12 pages

Communitas and the Other

On Hungarian (contemporary) dance after 1989

chapter 9|11 pages

Czech dance

From amnesia to emancipation

chapter 10|13 pages

Russian contemporary dance

chapter 11|11 pages

Body, identity and community

Dance in Bulgaria after 1989

chapter 12|9 pages

Let's work (differently)!

6MONTHS1LOCATION and the resonances between production, labor, thought, dance, and community

chapter |183 pages

Taniec w Europie po 1989