Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body

This thesis considers how the Black dancing body constitutes both Black history and dance history by reading the body in Pearl Primus' Hard time blues, The Negro speaks of rivers and Strange fruit as physical auto/biography, or what I shall herein refer to as auto/body/graphy. The Black dancing...

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Main Author: Escobar, Ninoska M'bewe
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3515
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2011-05-35152015-09-20T17:01:22ZAuto/body/graphy and the black dancing bodyEscobar, Ninoska M'bewePearl PrimusHard times bluesThe Negro speaks of riversStrange fruitDanceBlacksThis thesis considers how the Black dancing body constitutes both Black history and dance history by reading the body in Pearl Primus' Hard time blues, The Negro speaks of rivers and Strange fruit as physical auto/biography, or what I shall herein refer to as auto/body/graphy. The Black dancing body, because it is a repository of the Black experience, actively engages in the act of self-naming, self-shaping, and self-recognition. As such, it may be considered an auto/body/graphy that is situated in Black history, an instrument through which histories of origin and migration, struggle against oppression and colonialization, and the forging of identities and self-definition are inscribed and communicated. This thesis examines Primus' early choreographies as a discourse through which to consider the impact of Black cultural consciousness and the emergence of a Black aesthetic and Black corpo-reality in dance and theatre on the development of American modern dance before mid-century, and upon later choreographers who followed Primus.text2011-07-13T15:40:55Z2011-07-13T15:40:55Z2011-052011-07-13May 20112011-07-13T15:41:03Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-35152152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3515eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Pearl Primus
Hard times blues
The Negro speaks of rivers
Strange fruit
Dance
Blacks
spellingShingle Pearl Primus
Hard times blues
The Negro speaks of rivers
Strange fruit
Dance
Blacks
Escobar, Ninoska M'bewe
Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
description This thesis considers how the Black dancing body constitutes both Black history and dance history by reading the body in Pearl Primus' Hard time blues, The Negro speaks of rivers and Strange fruit as physical auto/biography, or what I shall herein refer to as auto/body/graphy. The Black dancing body, because it is a repository of the Black experience, actively engages in the act of self-naming, self-shaping, and self-recognition. As such, it may be considered an auto/body/graphy that is situated in Black history, an instrument through which histories of origin and migration, struggle against oppression and colonialization, and the forging of identities and self-definition are inscribed and communicated. This thesis examines Primus' early choreographies as a discourse through which to consider the impact of Black cultural consciousness and the emergence of a Black aesthetic and Black corpo-reality in dance and theatre on the development of American modern dance before mid-century, and upon later choreographers who followed Primus. === text
author Escobar, Ninoska M'bewe
author_facet Escobar, Ninoska M'bewe
author_sort Escobar, Ninoska M'bewe
title Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
title_short Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
title_full Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
title_fullStr Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
title_full_unstemmed Auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
title_sort auto/body/graphy and the black dancing body
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2011-05-3515
work_keys_str_mv AT escobarninoskambewe autobodygraphyandtheblackdancingbody
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