ABSTRACT

East Meets West in Dance chronicles this development in the words of many of its best known and most active exponents. This collection of articles provides a theoretical discussion of the promises and pitfalls inherent in transplanting art forms from one culture to another; it offers practical guidance for those who might want to participate in this enterprise and explains the general history of the dance exchange to date. It also identifies the differences that are unique to specific cultures, such as the development of theatrical forms, arts education, and the status of artists. This is a first examination of a phenomenon that has already touched most people in the arts community worldwide, and that none can afford to ignore. A lively dialogue has evolved over the last few decades between dance professionals -- performers, teachers and administrators -- in the United States and Europe and their counterparts in Asia and the Pacific rim.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

part II|70 pages

China

part IV|14 pages

Indonesia

chapter 14|6 pages

Tradition and Change in Bali

chapter 15|6 pages

The View from Jakarta

part V|44 pages

Japan

part Vi|38 pages

Korea

chapter 23|6 pages

Bringing Modern Dance to Korea

chapter 25|6 pages

In Search of a New Korean Voice

chapter 26|6 pages

What Is Dance?

chapter 27|14 pages

New Trends in Korea *

part VII|10 pages

Philippines

part VIII|56 pages

Taiwan