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Giddha

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Punjabi women's folk dance
"Gidda" redirects here. For the genus of beetle, seeGidda (beetle).

Giddha
GenreFolk dance
OriginPunjab
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Giddha (Punjabi:ਗਿੱਧਾ) is a popularfolk dance of women in thePunjab region. The dance is often considered derived from theancient dance known as the ring dance and is just as energetic asbhangra; at the same time it manages to creatively display feminine grace,elegance and flexibility. It is a highly colourful dance form which has spread to all regions of India. Women perform this dance mainly at festive or social occasions. The dance is accompanied by rhythmic clapping, with a typical traditional folk song performed by elder women in the background.[citation needed]

Giddha varies from other forms of traditional Punjabi dance in that it does not require the two-headed barreldhol drum to be performed. Instead, women stand in a circle formation and clap rhythms. A lead woman will recite aboli (lyrics) with a refrain that the entire circle then repeats. The whole form of a giddha song is worked through in thiscall and response form. Giddha details stories of women's lives, including sexuality.[1]

History

[edit]
Photograph of Punjabi village girls and women performing a group Giddha dance in a “Sath” in the 1920's

Giddha is said to be originated from the ancient ring dance which was dominant in Punjab.[2] Giddha displays a traditional mode of performing Punjabi femininity, as seen through dress, choreography, .[3] Since thePartition of India in 1947 and the division of Punjab intoWest Punjab (Pakistan) andEast Punjab (India), folk dances of Punjab on both sides of the border have been consolidated, staged, and promoted as iconic expressions of Punjabi culture.[4] While the form of giddha was not seriously affected by Partition, Gibb Schreffler writes that it has been classified as the women's dance counterpart to the male form bhangra, despite that not entirely being the case.[4]

As Punjabi dance forms became codified in the 1960s-onward, bhangra and giddha competitions have become popular throughout Punjab and thePunjabi diaspora. Punjabi dance forms have also spread through collegiate-level dance troupes in Punjab since the 1960s and in South Asian student groups in the US, UK, and Canada since the 1990s.[5]

Dress code

[edit]
Folk dancers from Punjab performing at six-day Folk Dance Festival ‘Lok Tarang, in New Delhi on January 19, 2007

Traditionally, women used to wear salwar kameez and Ghagra in bright colours and jewellery. The attire is completed by dressing the hair in two braids and folk ornaments and wearing a tikka on the forehead.[6]

References

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  1. ^"Dance Styles".Shan-e-Punjab. Retrieved22 June 2019.
  2. ^Conyers, Claude (23 February 2011),"Folk dance",Oxford Music Online, Oxford University Press,doi:10.1093/gmo/9781561592630.article.a2092451,ISBN 978-1-56159-263-0, retrieved20 March 2024{{citation}}: CS1 maint: work parameter with ISBN (link)
  3. ^"Giddha Origin and history". utsavpedia.com. 15 July 2013. Retrieved9 March 2017.
  4. ^abSchreffler, Gibb (2004). "Vernacular Music and Dance of Punjab".Journal of Punjab Studies.11 (2):197–214.
  5. ^Schreffler, Gibb (2013). "Situating bhangra dance: a critical introduction".South Asian History and Culture.4 (3):384–412.doi:10.1080/19472498.2013.808514.S2CID 143912821.
  6. ^"Giddha Dress Code". indianmirror.com. Retrieved9 March 2017.
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