ABSTRACT

Designed for students, scholars and general readers with an interest in dance and queer history, A Queer History of the Ballet focuses on how, as makers and as audiences, queer men and women have helped to develop many of the texts, images, and legends of ballet.

Presenting a series of historical case studies, the book explores the ways in which, from the nineteenth century into the twentieth, ballet has been a means of conjuring homosexuality – of enabling some degree of expression and visibility for people who were otherwise declared illegal and obscene.

Studies include:

  • the perverse sororities of the Romantic ballet
  • the fairy in folklore, literature, and ballet
  • Tchaikovsky and the making of Swan Lake
  • Diaghilev’s Ballets Russes and the emergence of queer modernity
  • the formation of ballet in America
  • the queer uses of the prima ballerina
  • Genet’s writings for and about ballet.

Also including a consideration of how ballet’s queer tradition has been memorialized by such contemporary dance-makers as Neumeier, Bausch, Bourne, and Preljocaj, this is an essential book in the study of ballet and queer history.

chapter |4 pages

INTRODUCTION

chapter 1|17 pages

Components: spaces, bodies, movement

chapter 2|24 pages

NUNS AND FAIRIES

chapter 3|20 pages

SWANS

chapter 4|27 pages

QUEER MODERNITY

chapter 5|32 pages

NEW YORK AND THE ‘CLOSED SHOP’

chapter 6|17 pages

THE PRIMA AND HER FANS

chapter 7|11 pages

DANCE OF THE SAILORS