Abstract
ABSTRACT
The “Grizzly Bear” animal dance sparked the social dance craze that swept the United States in the 1910s, causing a moral panic about the unseemly movements and erotic energies of this new popular leisure form. Djuna Barnes’s New York journalism on dance serves to connect these animal dances to the “eruption of animality in artistic and cultural texts” that Carrie Rohman has traced in modernism. Exploring social dance, Irene Castle’s career, and Barnes’s journalism, this article examines assemblages of bears and other dancing (human and nonhuman) animals to foreground the intersection of modernist animal ontologies with elusive histories of social dance.
Publisher
The Pennsylvania State University Press
Subject
Visual Arts and Performing Arts,Communication
Reference45 articles.
1. “Djuna Barnes Probes the Souls of the Jungle Folk at the Hippodrome Circus.”,1915