Description

Book Synopsis
The 1960s was a pivotal decade in dance, an era of intense experimentation and rich invention. In this volume a range of dance critics and scholars examine the pioneering choreographers and companies of the era.

Trade Review
This thoughtful collection of essays edited by Sally Banes, the preeminent historian of U.S. dance at mid-century, looks back at that tumultuous decade from a multiplicity of new perspectives. - Lynn Garafola, Barnard College; ""With the wave of interest Baryshnikov has cultivated in the 1960s, this scems exactly the right time to look again at the aesthetics and accomplishments of this era. And if I could choose any guide for this journey, it would be Sally Banes. She has claimed this fertile territory as her own, illuminating the dances of this era while meticulously grounding her discussion in American culture and the social turmoil of the 1960s."" - David Gere, University of California, Los Angeles; ""People who write about experimental dance in the 1960s often stress its conceptual nature, its ideas, but what I liked so much... was the human immediacy.... What you saw was not a metaphor. It was them, and when it worked, it was you too."" - Mikhail Baryshnikov, from the foreword

Table of Contents
Anna Halprin and the 1960s - acting in the gap between the personal, the public, and the political, Sally Banes; James Waring and the Judson Dance Theater - influences, intersections, divergences, Janice Ross; The philosophy of art history, dance, and the sixties, Leslie Satin; Dance quote unquote, Noeel Carroll; Dancing in New York - the sixties, Jill Johnston; Monk and King - the sixties kids, Gus Solomons, Jr; One route from ballet to postmodern, Deborah Jowitt; Radical discoveries - pioneering post-modern dance in Britain, Wendy Perron; Ballet review's beginnings - an interview with Arlene Croce, Stephanie Jordan; PastForward - choreographers' statements, Joan Acocella & Sally Banes.

Reinventing Dance in the 1960s Everything Was Possible

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    A Paperback by Sally Banes, Andrea Harris, Mikhail Baryshnikov

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      View other formats and editions of Reinventing Dance in the 1960s Everything Was Possible by Sally Banes

      Publisher: MP-WIS Uni of Wisconsin
      Publication Date: 7/31/2003 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780299180140, 978-0299180140
      ISBN10: 029918014X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The 1960s was a pivotal decade in dance, an era of intense experimentation and rich invention. In this volume a range of dance critics and scholars examine the pioneering choreographers and companies of the era.

      Trade Review
      This thoughtful collection of essays edited by Sally Banes, the preeminent historian of U.S. dance at mid-century, looks back at that tumultuous decade from a multiplicity of new perspectives. - Lynn Garafola, Barnard College; ""With the wave of interest Baryshnikov has cultivated in the 1960s, this scems exactly the right time to look again at the aesthetics and accomplishments of this era. And if I could choose any guide for this journey, it would be Sally Banes. She has claimed this fertile territory as her own, illuminating the dances of this era while meticulously grounding her discussion in American culture and the social turmoil of the 1960s."" - David Gere, University of California, Los Angeles; ""People who write about experimental dance in the 1960s often stress its conceptual nature, its ideas, but what I liked so much... was the human immediacy.... What you saw was not a metaphor. It was them, and when it worked, it was you too."" - Mikhail Baryshnikov, from the foreword

      Table of Contents
      Anna Halprin and the 1960s - acting in the gap between the personal, the public, and the political, Sally Banes; James Waring and the Judson Dance Theater - influences, intersections, divergences, Janice Ross; The philosophy of art history, dance, and the sixties, Leslie Satin; Dance quote unquote, Noeel Carroll; Dancing in New York - the sixties, Jill Johnston; Monk and King - the sixties kids, Gus Solomons, Jr; One route from ballet to postmodern, Deborah Jowitt; Radical discoveries - pioneering post-modern dance in Britain, Wendy Perron; Ballet review's beginnings - an interview with Arlene Croce, Stephanie Jordan; PastForward - choreographers' statements, Joan Acocella & Sally Banes.

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