Salsa Dance and the Transformation of Style: An Ethnographic Study of Movement and Meaning in a Cross-Cultural Context

Author:

Bosse Joanna

Abstract

Over the last century perennial surges in the popularity of Latin American couple dance genres such as tango and rumba in the United States have served as lightning rods for debate on issues of morality, performance, and identity. These “crazes” have fueled the collective American imagination, reinforcing a type of Latin American exotica that prevailed throughout the twentieth century and into the next. Consequently, they have also fostered an entirely new style of performance as white Americans borrowed—or perhaps better stated, appropriated—these genres for their own. For instance, the two styles of tango performed by ballroom dancers today, some one hundred years after its introduction to American audiences in theaters and exhibition performances, is sufficiently distant from its Argentine roots to be considered an entirely different dance employing different movements, rhythms, and musical accompaniment.This article explores this particular brand of cross-cultural borrowing through an ethnographic accounting of a salsa dance formation team in central Illinois. Salsa is the latest of the Latin dance crazes, and since the earl. 1990. the genre has experienced increased attention from mainstream American audiences who have invested significant resources in order to learn to dance salsa. Formation teams are presentational performance ensembles, in this case combining salsa; ballroom; and staged, theatrical dance, and generally draw their enthusiasts from ballroom dance circles.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Visual Arts and Performing Arts

Cited by 16 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Synthesizing Analyses: A Choreomusical Study of “La cumparsita”;The Cambridge Companion to Tango;2024-04-30

2. Dancing among older Latinos: Interweaving health and culture;Latino Studies;2021-10-29

3. Flipped, Broken, and Paused Clave;Journal of Music Theory;2021-04-01

4. Identity Passing in Intercultural Performance of K-pop Cover Dance;Journal of Intercultural Communication Research;2020-08-24

5. Dancing salsa in Benin: Connecting the Creole Atlantic;Atlantic Studies;2020-01-02

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