ABSTRACT

Social Partner Dance: Body, Sound, and Space is an ethnographic theory of social partner dancing built on participant observation and interviews with instructors of tango, lindy hop, salsa, blues, and various other forms. The work establishes a general analytical language for the study of these dances, based on the premise that a thorough understanding of any lead/follow form must consider in depth how it manages the four-part relationship between self, partner, music, and surroundings. Each chapter begins with a brief vignette on a distinct dance form and explores the focused worlds of partnered dancing done for the joy and entertainment of the dancers themselves. Grounded intellectually in embodiment studies and sensory ethnography, and empirically in ethnographic fieldwork, Social Partner Dance promotes scholarship that understands the social, cultural, and political functions of partner dance through its embodied practice.

chapter 1|24 pages

Introduction

The Four Branches of Awareness

chapter 2|24 pages

Choreohexis

Preparing for Partnership

chapter 3|24 pages

The Two-Body System

Positioning, Axis, and Elasticity

chapter 4|16 pages

Choreography

Base Elements, Vocabulary, and Basic Steps

chapter 5|24 pages

Moving to Music

Social Bodies Entraining

chapter 6|19 pages

Floorcraft

Sharing Space

chapter 7|19 pages

The Dance Partnership

Leading and Following

chapter 8|25 pages

Power Dynamics

Mechanisms of Patriarchy and Resistance

chapter 9|17 pages

Conclusion

Social Bodies in Training