Description

Book Synopsis

The Nazis burned books and banned much modern art. However, few people know the fascinating story of German modern dance, which was the great exception. Modern expressive dance found favor with the regime and especially with the infamous Dr. Joseph Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda. How modern artists collaborated with Nazism reveals an important aspect of modernism, uncovers the bizarre bureaucracy which controlled culture and tells the histories of great figures who became enthusiastic Nazis and lied about it later. The book offers three perspectives: the dancer Lilian Karina writes her very vivid personal story of dancing in interwar Germany; the dance historian Marion Kant gives a systematic account of the interaction of modern dance and the totalitarian state, and a documentary appendix provides a glimpse into the twisted reality created by Nazi racism, pedantic bureaucrats and artistic ambition.



Trade Review

“This book points the way for the next steps of further research … [It] will be a seminal work in facilitating the analysis of understanding the roles of dance and body under fascism.” • H-Net Reviews

“…a bristling book … Rarely have we been invited to read polemical history charged with both emotional intensity and – thankfully – voluminous documentation … Reading along with rapt attention, I can’t decide which is more surprising: the blistering clarity and conviction of Kant’s claims and their documantation, or the fuzzy preoccupation with self that Hitler’s dancers seemed to embody during this period.” • Dance Critics Association Newsletter

“This is a welcome publication … [It] provides a valuable insight into the period for English-speaking readers … The authors provide much new information and pose some serious questions … essential read.” • Dance Theatre Journal

Praise for the German edition:
“This book will change a lot in dance history. And it will indeed be a painful awakening for the idol worshippers who forgive artists all sins and place them above all moral responsibility.” • Judisk Kroenika

“This books is indispensable because of its many important documents.” • Ballettanz

“Highly recommended … The most important publication on dance in the Third Reich.” • Tanzwissenschaft

“An important contribution to the discussion [on Nazism and dance] - obligatory reading on the history of dance - that makes parts of this book as gripping as a thriller.” • Der Tanz der Dinge



Table of Contents

Translator's Foreword
Jonathan Steinberg

Preface
Marion Kant

PART I RECOLLECTIONS
Lilian Karina

Introduction
How this work came about
Have artists an interest in political and social circumstances?
The Faces of my Past

Chapter 1. A Historical Overview of the Labanist Period
Pre Labanism: The Rise of the Culture of the Body (1900-1920)
The Era of Labanism at its Peak: the Development of "New Dance," Modern and Stage Dance (1920s-1937)
Opposition to Labanism – Realistic Dance Theater

Chapter 2. Art and Culture under National Socialism
The New Legislation
The Doctrines of Race and Inheritance
The Invention of the Jewish Race: from Wagner to Rosenberg

Chapter 3. Sectarianism and Dance
The Historical Path of Racial Hygiene
Sects, Cults and Secret Societies
The New Magicians of Dance: Steiner, Klamt, Duncan, Laban
The Search for a Dance "True to Type" ["arteigen"]

Chapter 4. The Fates of Emigrants
Evgenia Eduardova and Josef Lewitan
Victor Gsovsky
Kurt Jooss
Sascha Leontieff
Aurél von Milloss
Lia Schubert

Chapter 5. The Situation in Scandinavia
The Association of Swedish Dance Pedagogues
Gertrude Engelhardt
Elsa Lindenberg
Edgar Frank
Lilian Karina

Chapter 6. Laban's Downfall and Post-Labansim
Post-Labanism

PART II: "DANCE IS A RACE QUESTION." THE DANCE POLITICS OF THE REICH MINISTRY OF POPULAR ENLIGHTENMENT AND PROPAGANDA
Marion Kant

Introduction
The State of Dance Research
Dance in Germany in 1930

Chapter 7. The Reich Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda
The Foundation of the Reich Chamber of Culture
Rivalries about Culture and Art
The Propaganda Ministry and the Reich Theater Chamber

Chapter 8. The Nazi Redirection of Dance
The Plan for a Nazi Dance Policy

Chapter 9. Ministerial Dance Politicos – Rudolf von Laban and Otto von Keudell
The Dance Festivals of 1934 and 1935

Chapter 10. The German Dance Theater and The German Master Workshops
Regulations for the Conduct of the Dance Examinations
The Olympic Games
The Temporary Finale

Chapter 11. The Next Stage
The Laban Case
The Wigman Case

Chapter 12. After Laban's Fall
From German Dance to German Ballet
A Ban on Dance
Total Dance
Post Script

PART III: THE NAZI ATTEMPT TO SUPPRESS JAZZ AND SWING: A CASE STUDY
Marion Kant

PART IV: DANCE UNDER THE NAZIS: DOCUMENTARY APPENDIX
Selected and Edited by Marion Kant

Appendix: The Administrative Structure of the Reich Ministry of Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda and the Reich Culture Chambers

Chronology
References
Abbreviations and Glossary
Sources
Archives and Collections
Bibliography
Index
Name entries
Subject entries

Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the

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A Paperback / softback by Lilian Karina, Marion Kant, Jonathan Steinberg

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    View other formats and editions of Hitler's Dancers: German Modern Dance and the by Lilian Karina

    Publisher: Berghahn Books, Incorporated
    Publication Date: 18/03/2004
    ISBN13: 9781571816887, 978-1571816887
    ISBN10: 1571816887

    Description

    Book Synopsis

    The Nazis burned books and banned much modern art. However, few people know the fascinating story of German modern dance, which was the great exception. Modern expressive dance found favor with the regime and especially with the infamous Dr. Joseph Goebbels, the Minister of Propaganda. How modern artists collaborated with Nazism reveals an important aspect of modernism, uncovers the bizarre bureaucracy which controlled culture and tells the histories of great figures who became enthusiastic Nazis and lied about it later. The book offers three perspectives: the dancer Lilian Karina writes her very vivid personal story of dancing in interwar Germany; the dance historian Marion Kant gives a systematic account of the interaction of modern dance and the totalitarian state, and a documentary appendix provides a glimpse into the twisted reality created by Nazi racism, pedantic bureaucrats and artistic ambition.



    Trade Review

    “This book points the way for the next steps of further research … [It] will be a seminal work in facilitating the analysis of understanding the roles of dance and body under fascism.” • H-Net Reviews

    “…a bristling book … Rarely have we been invited to read polemical history charged with both emotional intensity and – thankfully – voluminous documentation … Reading along with rapt attention, I can’t decide which is more surprising: the blistering clarity and conviction of Kant’s claims and their documantation, or the fuzzy preoccupation with self that Hitler’s dancers seemed to embody during this period.” • Dance Critics Association Newsletter

    “This is a welcome publication … [It] provides a valuable insight into the period for English-speaking readers … The authors provide much new information and pose some serious questions … essential read.” • Dance Theatre Journal

    Praise for the German edition:
    “This book will change a lot in dance history. And it will indeed be a painful awakening for the idol worshippers who forgive artists all sins and place them above all moral responsibility.” • Judisk Kroenika

    “This books is indispensable because of its many important documents.” • Ballettanz

    “Highly recommended … The most important publication on dance in the Third Reich.” • Tanzwissenschaft

    “An important contribution to the discussion [on Nazism and dance] - obligatory reading on the history of dance - that makes parts of this book as gripping as a thriller.” • Der Tanz der Dinge



    Table of Contents

    Translator's Foreword
    Jonathan Steinberg

    Preface
    Marion Kant

    PART I RECOLLECTIONS
    Lilian Karina

    Introduction
    How this work came about
    Have artists an interest in political and social circumstances?
    The Faces of my Past

    Chapter 1. A Historical Overview of the Labanist Period
    Pre Labanism: The Rise of the Culture of the Body (1900-1920)
    The Era of Labanism at its Peak: the Development of "New Dance," Modern and Stage Dance (1920s-1937)
    Opposition to Labanism – Realistic Dance Theater

    Chapter 2. Art and Culture under National Socialism
    The New Legislation
    The Doctrines of Race and Inheritance
    The Invention of the Jewish Race: from Wagner to Rosenberg

    Chapter 3. Sectarianism and Dance
    The Historical Path of Racial Hygiene
    Sects, Cults and Secret Societies
    The New Magicians of Dance: Steiner, Klamt, Duncan, Laban
    The Search for a Dance "True to Type" ["arteigen"]

    Chapter 4. The Fates of Emigrants
    Evgenia Eduardova and Josef Lewitan
    Victor Gsovsky
    Kurt Jooss
    Sascha Leontieff
    Aurél von Milloss
    Lia Schubert

    Chapter 5. The Situation in Scandinavia
    The Association of Swedish Dance Pedagogues
    Gertrude Engelhardt
    Elsa Lindenberg
    Edgar Frank
    Lilian Karina

    Chapter 6. Laban's Downfall and Post-Labansim
    Post-Labanism

    PART II: "DANCE IS A RACE QUESTION." THE DANCE POLITICS OF THE REICH MINISTRY OF POPULAR ENLIGHTENMENT AND PROPAGANDA
    Marion Kant

    Introduction
    The State of Dance Research
    Dance in Germany in 1930

    Chapter 7. The Reich Ministry for Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda
    The Foundation of the Reich Chamber of Culture
    Rivalries about Culture and Art
    The Propaganda Ministry and the Reich Theater Chamber

    Chapter 8. The Nazi Redirection of Dance
    The Plan for a Nazi Dance Policy

    Chapter 9. Ministerial Dance Politicos – Rudolf von Laban and Otto von Keudell
    The Dance Festivals of 1934 and 1935

    Chapter 10. The German Dance Theater and The German Master Workshops
    Regulations for the Conduct of the Dance Examinations
    The Olympic Games
    The Temporary Finale

    Chapter 11. The Next Stage
    The Laban Case
    The Wigman Case

    Chapter 12. After Laban's Fall
    From German Dance to German Ballet
    A Ban on Dance
    Total Dance
    Post Script

    PART III: THE NAZI ATTEMPT TO SUPPRESS JAZZ AND SWING: A CASE STUDY
    Marion Kant

    PART IV: DANCE UNDER THE NAZIS: DOCUMENTARY APPENDIX
    Selected and Edited by Marion Kant

    Appendix: The Administrative Structure of the Reich Ministry of Popular Enlightenment and Propaganda and the Reich Culture Chambers

    Chronology
    References
    Abbreviations and Glossary
    Sources
    Archives and Collections
    Bibliography
    Index
    Name entries
    Subject entries

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