Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice
Dignity in Motion
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SUBJECTS
Theater & Dance » Dance
REVIEWS
"Jackson and Shapiro-Phim are the first to focus an investigation so cohesively on the political implications of movement. The result is a ground-breaking anthology that repositions understandings of the fundamental ways in which the dancer's body serves a range of human rights agendas from the oppressive to the corporate-controlled, nationalist, and liberatory. Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice asks readers to re-evaluate the power of dance as a staged form of resistance. In the process, contributors reveal in more subtle ways the complexity of defining human rights. This book is of interest to an audience much broader than just those interested in the performing arts."
Summer Post 2, July 2009, Southwest Journal of Cultures
DESCRIPTION
Dance, Human Rights, and Social Justice: Dignity in Motion presents a wide-ranging compilation of essays, spanning more than 15 countries. Organized in four parts, the articles examine the regulation and exploitation of dancers and dance activity by government and authoritative groups, including abusive treatment of dancers within the dance profession; choreography involving human rights as a central theme; the engagement of dance as a means of healing victims of human rights abuses; and national and local social/political movements in which dance plays a powerful role in helping people fight oppression.
These groundbreaking papersboth detailed scholarship and riveting personal accountsencompass a broad spectrum of issues, from slavery and the Holocaust to the Bosnian and Rwandan genocides to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict; from First Amendment cases and the AIDS epidemic to discrimination resulting from age, gender, race, and disability. A range of academics, choreographers, dancers, and dance/movement therapists draw connections between refugee camp, courtroom, theater, rehearsal studio, and university classroom.
List of Contributors
Germaine Acogny, Marjorie Agosín, Gaby Aldor, Elizabeth Aldrich, Alito Alessi, Carol Anderson, Wyatt Bessing, Linda Frye Burnham, Ananya Chatterjea, Ya-ping Chen, César Delgado Martínez, Mary Fitzgerald, David Gere, Amber Gray, Judith Lynne Hanna, David Alan Harris, Joan Huckstep, Judith Brin Ingber, Naomi Jackson, Judith Kajiwara, Marion Kant, Robin Lakes, Ralph Lemon, Sal Murgiyanto, Cecilia Olsson, Lemi Sala Ponifasio, Maysoun Rafeedie, Janice Ross, Nicholas Rowe, Sophiline Cheam Shapiro, Toni Shapiro-Phim, Anthony Shay, Allison Singer, Yunyu Wang
ABOUT THE EDITORS
Naomi Jackson, Ph.D. in performance studies, is associate professor in the Department of Dance at Arizona State University. She is the author of Converging Movements: Modern Dance and Jewish Culture at the 92nd Street Y (2002).
Toni Shapiro-Phim, Ph.D. in cultural anthropology, is director of research and archiving at the Khmer Arts Academy in Takhmao, Cambodia. She is the co-author of Dance in Cambodia (1999).
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