Book Details
Orange Code:32001
Paperback:497 pages
Publications:
Categories:
Sections:
1. An Australian in Paris: Techno-Choreographic Bohemianism in Moulin Rouge!2. A Different Kind of Ballet: Rereading Dorothy Arzner’s Dance, Girl, Dance3. Communities of Practice: Active and Affective Viewing of Early Social Dance on the Popular Screen4. Disciplining Black Swan, Animalizing Ambition5. Gene Kelly: The Original, Updated6. Appreciation, Appropriation, Assimilation: Stormy Weather and the Hollywood History of Black Dance7. Hip-Hop in Hollywood: Encounter, Community, Resistance8. Dirty Dancing: Dance, Class, and Race in the Pursuit of Womanhood9. Displace and Be Queen: Gender and Interculturalism in Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004)10. “It’s Sort of ‘Members Only’.”: Transgression and Body Politics in Save the Last Dance11. “The White Girl in the Middle”: The Performativity of Race, Class, and Gender in Step Up 2: The Streets12. Affect-ive Moves: Space, Violence, and the Body in RIZE’s Krump Dancing13. “He’s Doing His Superman Thing Again”: Moving Bodies in The Matrix14. Girl Power, Real Politics: Dis/Respectability, Post-Raciality, and the Politics of Inclusion15. Denaturalizing Coco’s “Sexy” Hips: Contradictions and Reversals of the Dancing Body of a Chinese American Superstar in Mand16. Single Ladies, Plural: Racism, Scandal, and “Authenticity” within the Multiplication and Circulation of Online Dance Disco17. The Dance Factor: Hip-Hop, Spectacle, and Reality Television18. Defining Dance, Creating Commodity: The Rhetoric of So You Think You Can Dance19. Hatchets and Hairbrushes: Dance, Gender, and Improvisational Ingenuity in Cold War Western Musicals20. Monstrous Belonging: Performing “Thriller” after 9/1121. Dancing “between the Break Beats”: Contemporary Indigenous Thought and Cultural Expression through Hip-Hop22. Dancing with Myself: Dance Central, Choreography, and Embodiment
Description:
The Oxford Handbook of Dance and the Popular Screen sets the agenda for the study of dance in popular moving images - films, television shows, commercials, music videos, and YouTube - and offers new ways to understand the multi-layered meanings of the dancing body by engaging with methodologies from critical dance studies, performance studies, and film/media analysis. Through thorough engagement with these approaches, the chapters demonstrate how dance on the popular screen might be read and considered through bodies and choreographies in moving media.
Questions the contributors consider include: How do dance and choreography function within the filmic apparatus? What types of bodies are associated with specific dances and how does this affect how dance(s) is/are perceived in the everyday? How do the dancing bodies on screen negotiate power, access, and agency? How are multiple choreographies of identity (e.g., race, class, gender, sexuality, and nation) set in motion through the narrative, dancing bodies, and/or dance style? What types of corporeal labors (dance training, choreographic skill, rehearsal, the constructed notion of "natural talent") are represented or ignored? What role does a specific film have in the genealogy of Hollywood dance film? How does the Hollywood dance film inform how dance operates in making cultural meanings?
Whether looking at Bill "Bojangles" Robinson's tap steps in Stormy Weather, or Baby's leap into Johnny Castle's arms in Dirty Dancing, or even Neo's backwards bend in The Matrix, the book's arguments offer powerful new scholarship on dance in the popular screen.
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