university of north carolina at...

1
P.O. Box 2603, Costa Mesa, CA 92628 U.S.A. Tel.: (714) 751-5252; Fax: (714)751-4805; e-mail: [email protected]; Homepage: www.mazdapub.com Subjects: Dance, Middle Eastern, Oriental, Belly Dance, Solo Improvised Dance, Transnationalism MAZDA PUBLISHERS BOOK NEWS Academic publishers since 1980 Individual orders must be prepaid by either check, money order, Visa, or Mastercard. Shipping Charges: Please add $3.95 for the first book and $1.25 for each additional book. California residents must add 7.75% sales tax. Mail or Fax orders to Mazda Publishers. NOTICE to U.S. Customers: In addition to your local bookstores, the following booksellers will special order our books for you. www.amazon.com, Barnes & Noble Booksellers, and Borders Books and Music. Specifications: April, 2005 : x+396pp.,plates,bibliography, index. ISBN:1-56859-183-7 (paper): $35.00 Bibliotheca Iranica: Performing Arts Series No. 6 Specifications are subject to change without notice. ORDER/RESERVATION FORM Name:____________________________________________ Address:__________________________________________ City:______________________________________________ State/Country:_______________ Zip/Postal Code:_______ Tel.:__________________ Fax:_____________________ Belly Dance Orientalism, Transnationalism,and Harem Fantasy Please send ____ copy(ies) of the above title. Credit Card No. : [ ]VISA ; [ ] Mastercard ______________________________________ Exp. Date:______________________________ Signature:_____________________________ Edited by Anthony Shay and Barbara Sellers-Young For over a century, solo improvised dance, especially belly dance, has had enormous popularity, and by the 1970s and 1980s in the wake of the feminist movement, over a million women in the United States, and many more thousands in West- ern Europe became devotees of this choreographic form. This volume traces several strands of this phenomenon. Anthony Shay and Barbara Sellers-Young provide an overview of solo improvised dance in the Middle East and in the West. Several essays address the dance tradition in the Middle East: Najwa Adra describes and analyzes the performance of solo improvised dance in domestic circles in the Arab world, Anthony Shay analyzes the issue of how Islam and individuals among the Moslem clergy perceive and react to dance, Stavros Stavrou deconstructs the famous encounter between Gustave Flaubert and the Egyptian dancer Kuchek Hanum in terms of colonialism, Roberta Dougherty analyzes the popular images of the belly dancer in the Egyptian cinema, Shay addresses the question of male dancers and their performances, and Linda Swanson adds a whimsical interpretation of the famous twenti- eth century Egyptian belly dancer Tahia Carioca. The dance was frequently seen in the West by millions of visitors to world fairs and exhibitions that were popular in the 19 th century and Sol Bloom, the entrepreneur of the Chicago World Fair of 1893 coined the term “belly dance.” From that period, belly dance became a popular entertainment in the United States. Ameri- can women found the dance to be a liberating vehicle and a means of adopting new and exotic persona. They developed several new genres of the dance. Barbara Sellers-Young describes and ana- lyzes tribal belly dance, a genre that was invented in San Francisco, Anne Rasmussen provides an overview of the music used in Arab nightclubs in the United States and a descrip- tion of the musicians and the club milieu, Donnalee Dox analyzes the spiritual belly dance movement, An- drea Deagon addresses the enduring trope of oriental dance: Salome’s Dance of the Seven Veils through performances both from the turn of the century and contemporary versions, Nancy Lee Ruyter gives a historical per- spective of La Meri’s, one of the earlier interpreters of belly dance, Jennifer Fisher looks at the orientalist implications of the Arabian dance from the Nutcracker, often inspired by oriental dancing and seen by millions of audience members across America. An epi- logue by the editors provides an overview of the topic and inte- grates the scholarly material for the reader. April, 2005 Order before April 15 and save 25% Regular price: $35.00 Pre-publication price: $26.25

Upload: others

Post on 13-Jul-2020

1 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: University of North Carolina at Wilmingtonpeople.uncw.edu/deagona/raqs/shay-Belly-Dance-news.pdfbelly dance movement, An-drea Deagon addresses the enduring trope of oriental dance:

P.O. Box 2603, Costa Mesa, CA 92628 U.S.A.Tel.: (714) 751-5252; Fax: (714)751-4805; e-mail: [email protected]; Homepage: www.mazdapub.com

Subjects:Dance, Middle Eastern, Oriental, Belly Dance,

Solo Improvised Dance, Transnationalism

������ ����� ��

������ ��Academic publishers since 1980

Individual orders must be prepaid by either check, money order, Visa, or Mastercard. Shipping Charges: Please add $3.95 for the firstbook and $1.25 for each additional book. California residents must add 7.75% sales tax. Mail or Fax orders to Mazda Publishers.NOTICE to U.S. Customers: In addition to your local bookstores, the following booksellers will special order our books for you.www.amazon.com, Barnes & Noble Booksellers, and Borders Books and Music.

Specifications:April, 2005 : x+396pp.,plates,bibliography, index.

ISBN:1-56859-183-7 (paper): $35.00Bibliotheca Iranica: Performing Arts Series No. 6

Specifications are subject to change without notice.

ORDER/RESERVATION FORM

Name:____________________________________________

Address:__________________________________________

City:______________________________________________

State/Country:_______________ Zip/Postal Code:_______

Tel.:__________________ Fax:_____________________

������ ����Orientalism, Transnationalism,and Harem Fantasy

Please send ____ copy(ies) of the above title.

Credit Card No. : [ ]VISA ; [ ] Mastercard______________________________________

Exp. Date:______________________________

Signature:_____________________________

Edited by Anthony Shay and Barbara Sellers-Young

For over a century, solo improvised dance, especially belly dance,has had enormouspopularity, and bythe 1970s and1980s in the wakeof the feministmovement, over amillion women inthe United States,and many morethousands in West-ern Europe becamedevotees of thisc h o r e o g r a p h i cform. This volume traces several strands of this phenomenon.Anthony Shay and Barbara Sellers-Young provide an overview ofsolo improvised dance in the Middle East and in the West.

Several essays address the dance tradition in the MiddleEast: Najwa Adra describes and analyzes the performance ofsolo improvised dance in domestic circles in the Arab world,Anthony Shay analyzes the issue of how Islam and individualsamong the Moslem clergy perceive and react to dance, StavrosStavrou deconstructs the famous encounter between GustaveFlaubert and the Egyptian dancer Kuchek Hanum in terms ofcolonialism, Roberta Dougherty analyzes the popular images ofthe belly dancer in the Egyptian cinema, Shay addresses thequestion of male dancers and their performances, and LindaSwanson adds a whimsical interpretation of the famous twenti-eth century Egyptian belly dancer Tahia Carioca.

The dance was frequently seen in the West by millions ofvisitors to world fairs and exhibitions that were popular in the 19th

century and Sol Bloom, the entrepreneur of the Chicago WorldFair of 1893 coined the term “belly dance.” From that period, bellydance became a popular entertainment in the United States. Ameri-can women found the dance to be a liberating vehicle and a meansof adopting new and exotic persona. They developed several newgenres of the dance. Barbara Sellers-Young describes and ana-

lyzes tribal belly dance, agenre that was invented inSan Francisco, AnneRasmussen provides anoverview of the music usedin Arab nightclubs in theUnited States and a descrip-tion of the musicians andthe club milieu, DonnaleeDox analyzes the spiritualbelly dance movement, An-drea Deagon addresses the

enduring trope of oriental dance: Salome’s Dance of the SevenVeils through performances both from the turn of the century andcontemporary versions, Nancy Lee Ruyter gives a historical per-spective of La Meri’s, one of the earlier interpreters of belly dance,Jennifer Fisher looks at the orientalist implications of the Arabiandance from the Nutcracker, often inspired by oriental dancing andseen by millions of audience members across America. An epi-logue by the editors provides an overview of the topic and inte-grates the scholarly material for the reader.

April, 2005

Order before April 15 and save 25%Regular price: $35.00Pre-publication price: $26.25