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History of dance

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Veiled dancer, ancient Greek terracotta figurine fromMyrina,c. 150–100 BC.Louvre Museum
Ancient Greek terracotta statuette of a dancing maenad, 3rd century BC, fromTaranto.

Thehistory of dance is difficult to access becausedance does not often leave behind clearly identifiable physical artifacts that last over millennia, such asstone tools, hunting implements orcave paintings. It is not possible to identify with exact precision when dance becomes part ofhuman culture. Dance is filled with aesthetic values, making it distinct from one society to another and is shrouded in symbolism that expounds on the cultural heritage of a community accordingly being unique from one society to another. Dance can help tell a story, convey feelings and emotions, and connect with others and ourselves.

Early dance

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The natural impulse to dance may have existed in early primates before they evolved into humans.[1]Dance has been an important part ofceremony,rituals,celebrations andentertainment since before the birth of the earliest humancivilizations.Archaeology delivers traces of dance fromprehistoric times such as the 10,000-year-oldBhimbetka rock shelters paintings inIndia andEgyptian tomb depicting dancing figures from c. 3300 BC. Manycontemporary dance forms can be traced back tohistorical,traditional,ceremonial andethnic dances of the ancient period.

Means of social communication and bonding

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Dance may have been used as a tool of social interaction that promoted cooperation essential for survival among earlyhumans. Studies found that today's best dancers share two specific genes associated with a predisposition for being good social communicators.[2]

Also, the term "kinesthetic" is the right term to help understanding how dance makes communication, and it means recognition of movement of one's own body, this word is a combination of two words (Greek:kinein "to move",aesthesis "perception"). So dance moves and background sounds play a big role too. When there is a group performance by holding hands or shoulders or even dancing opposite each other makes them feel communicated and bonded.[3]

As folk celebrations

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Main article:Folk dance

Many dances of the early periods were performed as a ritual to the gods who ancestors believed needed to be kept entertained for world peace.[4] Dance used in many celebrations and until now. Throughout  history we can notice that dance had many uses such as also community dance, harvesting and worship. Dance evolution started as folk origins to court presentations and now theater or even cinema movies.[5]

In ceremonies and rituals

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Main article:Ceremonial dance

Dance may be performed in religious or shamanic rituals, for example inrain dance performed in times of drought. Shamans dancing for rain is mentioned in ancient Chinese texts. Dance is an important aspect of some religious rites in ancient Egypt,[6] similarly dance is also integral to many ceremonies and rites among African people.[7] Ritual dances may also be performed in temples and during religious festivals, for example theRasa ritual dances of India (a number ofIndian classical dances may have their origin in ritual dances), and theCham dances of Tibet.[8]

As a method of healing

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Another early use of dance may have been as a precursor to ecstatictrance states in healing rituals. Dance is used for this purpose by many cultures from the Brazilianrainforest to theKalahari Desert.[9] Medieval Europeandanses macabres were thought to have protected participants from disease; however, the hysteria and duration of these dances sometimes led to death due to exhaustion.[10]

According to a Sinhalese legend,Kandyan dances originated 2500 years ago from a magic dance ritual that broke the spell on a bewitched king to cure the king of a mysterious illness.

As a method of expression

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One of the earliest structured uses of dances may have been in the performance and in the telling of myths. It was also sometimes used to show feelings for one of the opposite gender. It is also linked to the origin of "lovemaking". Before the production of written languages, dance was one of the methods of passing these stories down from generation to generation.[11]

In European culture, one of the earliest records of dancing is byHomer, whoseIliad describeschorea (χορείαkhoreia). The earlyGreeks made the art of dancing into a system, expressive of all the different passions. For example, the dance of theFuries, so represented, would create complete terror among those who witnessed them. The Greek philosopher,Aristotle, ranked dancing withpoetry, and said that certain dancers, with rhythm applied to gesture, could express manners, passions, and actions.[12] The most eminent Greek sculptors studied theattitude of the dancers for their art of imitating the passion.

Cultural traditions

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Asia

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See also:Dance § Asia
Shiva asNataraja (Lord of Dance)

Indian classical dance

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Main articles:Dance in India andDances of Sri Lanka

An early manuscript describing dance is theNatya Shastra on which is based the modern interpretation ofclassical Indian dance (e.g.Bharathanatyam).

During the reign of the lastMughals andNawabs ofOudh, dance fell down to the status of 'nautch', an unethical sensuous thing of courtesans.

Later, linking dance with immoral trafficking and prostitution, British rule prohibited public performance of dance. Many disapproved of it. In 1947, India won its freedom and created for dance an ambience where it could regain its past glory. Classical forms and regional distinctions were re-discovered, ethnic specialties were honored, and by synthesizing them with the individual talents of the masters in the line and fresh innovations, emerged dance with a new face but with classicism of the past.

InSri Lanka, the ancientSinhalese chronicleMahavamsa states that whenKing Vijaya landed in Sri Lanka in 543 BCE he heard sounds of music and dancing from a wedding ceremony. The origins of thedances of Sri Lanka are dated back to the aboriginal tribes, and to the mythological times ofaboriginal yingyang twins and "yakkas" (devils). The classical dances of Sri Lanka (Kandyan dances) feature a highly developed system of tala (rhythm) and provided by cymbals called thalampataa.

Chinese dance

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Main article:History of Chinese dance
Details from a copy of a 10th-century paintingNight Revels of Han Xizai byGu Hongzhong, depicting a dancer performing a dance known in theTang dynasty.

There is a long recorded history of Chinese dances. Some of the dances mentioned in ancient texts, such as dancing with sleeve movements are still performed today. Some of the early dances were associated with shamanic rituals.Folk dances of the early period were also developed into court dances. The important dances of the ancient period were the ceremonialyayue dated to theZhou dynasty of the first millennium BC. The art of dance in China reached its peak during theTang dynasty, a period when dancers from many parts of the world also performed at the imperial court. However,Chinese opera became popular during the Song and Yuan dynasty, and many dances were merged into Chinese opera.[13] The art of dance in women also declined from theSong dynasty onward as a result of the increasing popularity offootbinding,[14] a practice that ironically may have originated from dancing when a dancer wrapped her feet so she may dance ballet-fashion.[15][16] The best-known of the Chinese traditional dances are thedragon dance andlion dance. Lion dance was described in the Tang dynasty in form that resembles today's dance.[13]

Iranian dance

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Prehistory
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Dancers on a piece of ceramic from Cheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Iran, 5000 BC. Currently located at the Louvre
Dancers on a piece of ceramic fromCheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Iran, 5000 BC now at theLouvre

The people of the Iranian plateau have known dance in the forms of music, play, drama or religious rituals and have used instruments like mask, costumes of animals or plants, and musical instruments for rhythm, at least since the 6th millennium BC. Cultural mixed forms of dance, play and drama have served rituals like celebration, mourning and worship. And the actors have been masters of music, dance, physical acts and manners of expression. Artifacts with pictures of dancers, players or actors were found in many archaeological prehistoric sites in Iran, like Tepe Sabz, Ja'far Abad, Chogha Mish, Tall-e Jari, Cheshmeh Ali, Ismaeel Abad, Tal-e bakun, Tepe Sialk, Tepe Musian, tepe Yahya, Shahdad, Tepe Gian, Kul Farah, Susa, Kok Tepe, Cemeteries of Luristan, etc.[17]

History
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Seal with a Persian man dancing,Achaemenid period, datedc. 400 BC. Currently housed in theJ. Paul Getty Museum in Los Angeles
Dancers and musicians on a Sasanian bowl

The earliest researched dance from historic Iran is a dance worshipingMithra (as in the Cult of Mithras) in which a bull was sacrificed.[18] This cult later became highly adhered in theRoman Empire. This dance was to promote vigor in life.[19] Ancient Persian dance was significantly researched by Greek historian fromHerodotus of Halikarnassos, in his workBook IX (Calliope), in which he describes the history of Asian empires and Persian wars until 478 BC.[19] Ancient Persia was occupied by foreign powers, firstGreeks, thenArabs, and thenMongols and in turn political instability and civil wars occurred. Throughout these changes a slow disappearance of heritage dance traditions occurred.[19]

17th centuryPersian women dance in a ceremony inIran

Religious prohibition of dancing in Iran came with the spread of Islam, but it was spurred by historical events.[19] Religious prohibition to dancing waxed and waned over the years, but after theIranian Revolution in 1979 dancing was no longer allowed due to its frequent mixing of the sexes.[19][20] The Islamic Revolution of 1979 was the end of a successful era for dancing and the art of ballet in Iran.[18] The Iranian national ballet company was dissolved and its members emigrated to different countries.[18] According to the principles of the "cultural revolution" in Iran, dancing was considered to be perverse, a great sin, immoral and corrupting.[18] As a result, many of the talented Persian dancers moved to the West and spread out mainly in Europe and the United States and a new generation of Iranian dancers and ballet artists have grown up in the Diaspora.[18]

Europe

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See also:Medieval dance,Renaissance dance,History of ballet, andDance § Europe
Pietro Longhi,La lezirawrone di danza ("The Dancing Lesson"), ca 1741, Venezia, Gallerie dell'Accademia.

15th–19th centuries: from court dancing to Romanticism

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The origins of ballet dancing can be traced to the Italian Renaissance courts of the 15th century. Dance masters would teach the steps to nobility and the court would participate in performances as a form of social entertainment. This practice continued for several centuries. In the 17th century,courtly ballet reached its peak under the rule of KingLouis XIV.[21]

By the 18th century,ballet had migrated from the French and Italian royal courts to theParis Opéra under the careful direction of composer/dancerJean-Baptiste Lully. Lully sought to develop ballet into more serious art. Under his influence, ballet was turned into a recognized art that was performed by professional dancers rather than courtiers.

During the 18th century, ballet transitioned from a courtly dance of moving images as a spectacle to performance art in its own right. Ballet performances developed around a central narrative and contained an expressive movement that revealed the relationships between characters. This dramatic style of ballet became known as theballet d'action. The ballet d'action strove to express, for the first time, human emotions drawn directly from the dancers themselves. Masks previously worn by performers were removed so that emotional content could be derived from facial expressions.[21]

Costumes during this time were very restricting for dancers. Although a more expressive use of the body was encouraged, dancers' movements were still restricted due to heavy materials and corseted dresses. Costumes often covered a dancer's physique and made it difficult to see complex or intricate choreography. It was not until choreographerJean Georges Noverre called for dance reforms in 1760 with hisLetters on Dancing and Ballets that costumes became more conducive. Noverre urged that costumes be crafted using lightweight fabrics that move fluidly with the body, complementing a dancer's figure. In addition, dancers wore soft slippers that fit snugly along the foot. This shoe design instilled confidence within theballerina, daring her to dance on her toes. Naturalistic costuming allowed dancers to push the boundaries of movement, eventually risingen pointe.

The era ofRomanticism produced ballets inspired by fantasy, mystique, and the unfamiliar cultures of exotic places. Ballets that focused more on the emotions, the fantasy and the spiritual worlds and heralded the beginning of true pointe-work. Now, on her toes, the deified ballerina (embodied in this period by the legendary ballerinaMarie Taglioni) seemed to magically skim the surface of the stage, an ethereal being never quite touching the ground. It was during this period that the ascending star of the ballerina quite eclipsed the presence of the poor male dancer, who was in many cases reduced to the status of a moving statue, present only in order to lift the ballerina. This sad state was really only redressed by the rise of the male ballet starVaslav Nijinsky, with theBallets Russes, in the early 20th century. Ballet as we know it had well and truly evolved by this time, with all the familiar conventions of costume, choreographic form, plot, pomp, and circumstance firmly fixed in place. Nijinsky brought athleticism into ballet. Although at that time his choreography was considered as controversial, now they are considered as one of the first contemporary ballets.[1]

Early 20th century: from ballet to contemporary dance

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Since the Ballets Russes began revolutionizing ballet in the early 20th century, there have been continued attempts to break the mold of classical ballet. Currently the artistic scope of ballet technique (and its accompanying music, jumper, andmultimedia) is more all-encompassing than ever. The boundaries that classify a work of classical ballet are constantly being stretched, muddied and blurred until perhaps all that remains today are traces of technique idioms such asturnout.

The 20th century was indeed a period of breaking away from everything that ballet stood for. It was a time of unprecedented creative growth, for dancers and choreographers. It was also a time of the broadening of the definition of dance. Ballets Russes was a turning point to the future of ballet in the West and in the world. Collaborating with that era geniuses, such as Coco Chanel, Pablo Picasso and others.[2] Ballets Russes brought together great music, design and dance together in a one complete performance.[3]

Africa

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Main article:African dance

African dance refers mainly to the dance styles ofSub-Saharan Africa, of which many are based on traditional rhythms and music traditions of the region. Modern African dance styles are deeply rooted in culture and tradition. Many tribes have a role solely for the purpose of passing on the tribe's dance traditions; dances which have been passed down through the centuries, often unchanged, with little to no room for improvisation.[22][23] Each tribe developed its own unique style of dance, falling into three categories based on purpose. The first is religious dancing, which many tribes purport enhances peace, health, and prosperity.[20] Religious dances often involved masqueraders, performing as both the spirits and those who placated them.[22] Religion and spirituality infused every part of traditional African life, and continues to affect African dance today. The second is griotic, and was a type of dance that told a story. It is named after agriot, which is a term for a traditional storyteller in West Africa. Certain griotic dances were only danced by the tribe'sgriot; today, troupes perform the same dances that were once exclusive to thegriot. The third type is ceremonial. These dances are performed at ceremonies such as weddings, anniversaries, and rites of passage.[20] However, many dances did not have only one purpose. Rather, there was often one primary purpose, that blended into many secondary purposes. Dance was often very important to the maintenance of a ruler's status in the tribal society. Colonialism and globalization have resulted in the eradication of certain styles of African dance. Other styles have been blended together, or mixed with dance styles outside of Africa.[22]

African dance in the context of slavery

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As people were taken from Africa to be sold as slaves, especially starting in the 1500s, they brought their dance styles with them. Entire cultures were imported into the New World, especially those areas where slaves were given more flexibility to continue their cultures and where there were more African slaves than Europeans or indigenous Americans, such asBrazil. African dance styles were merged with new cultural experiences to form new styles of dance. For example, slaves responded to the fears of their masters about high-energy styles of dance with changing stepping to shuffling.[20] However, in North America, slaves did not have as much freedom to continue their culture and dance.[23][20] In many cases, these dances have evolved into modern dance styles, such asAfrican-American dance andBrazilian dance. For example, the Calenda evolved in Brazil from tribal dance. The Calenda then evolved into the Cakewalk, which was danced originally to mock plantation owners; it then evolved into theCharleston.[20]Capoeira was a martial art practiced originally in Africa which the enslaved Africans masked as a form of dance in order to not arouse the suspicion of plantation owners.[24]

The late 20th and early 21st centuries

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Diagram of 20th century American dance history

Postmodernism

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After the explosion of modern dance in the early 20th century, the 1960s saw the growth ofpostmodernism. Postmodernism veered towards simplicity, the beauty of small things, the beauty of untrained body, and unsophisticated movement. The famous"No" manifesto, byYvonne Rainer, rejecting all costumes, stories and outer trappings in favour of raw and unpolished movement was perhaps the extreme of this wave of thinking. However, it was not long before sets, décor and shock value re-entered the vocabulary of modern choreographers.

Street dance

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At the same time,mass culture experienced expansion ofstreet dance. In 1973, famous groupJackson 5 performed on television a dance calledRobot (choreographed bypostmodern[25] artistMichael Jackson), a dance form cultivated in Richmond, CA. This event and laterSoul Train performances by black dancers (such as Don Cambell) ignited a street culture revolution, in a sense. B-boying in New York, Locking in L.A., Popping in Fresno, CA, Boogaloo in Oakland, CA, Robot in Richmond, CA, all had their own creative explosions happen around the late '60s–'70s. Each with its own histories, practices, innovators and foundations.

For the emergence of 20th-century modern dance see also:Mary Wigman,Gret Palucca,Harald Kreutzberg,Yvonne Georgi, andIsadora Duncan.

Hip-hop dance started when Clive Campbell, akaKool DJ Herc and the father of hip-hop, came to New York from Jamaica in 1967. Toting the seeds of reggae from his homeland, he is credited with being the first DJ to use two turntables and identical copies of the same record to create his jams. But it was his extension of the breaks in these songs—the musical section where the percussive beats were most aggressive—that allowed him to create and name a culture of break boys and break girls who laid it down when the breaks came up. Briefly termedb-boys and b-girls, these dancers foundedbreakdancing, which is now a cornerstone of hip-hop dance.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Frederick, Eva (December 23, 2019)."Dancing chimpanzees may reveal how humans started to boogie".Science.doi:10.1126/science.aba6904.S2CID 214152330.
  2. ^Heather Whipps (March 10, 2006)."Survival Dance: How Humans Waltzed Through the Ice Age".Live Science.
  3. ^Smyth, Mary M. (1984).Kinesthetic Communication in Dance. Dance Research Journal 16, no. 2.
  4. ^Manorma Sharma (2007).Musical Heritage of India. APH. p. 65.ISBN 978-8131300466.
  5. ^Snodgrass, Marry Ellen.The Encyclopedia of World Folk Dance. London: Rowman & Little field,2016.
  6. ^"Music & Dance".Pan Historia.
  7. ^Kassing, Gayle (15 August 2014).Discovering Dance. Human Kinetics Publishers. p. 132.ISBN 978-1450468862.
  8. ^Manohar Laxman Varadpande (1987).History of Indian Theatre, Volume 2. Abhinav Publications. pp. 36–40.ISBN 9788170172789.
  9. ^Guenther, Mathias Georg. 'The San Trance Dance: Ritual and Revitalization Among the Farm Bushmen of the Ghanzi District, Republic of Botswana.' Journal, South West Africa Scientific Society, v30, 1975–76.
  10. ^Laurson, Jens (Summer 2012). "The Dances, Joys, Pleasures".Listen. p. 45.
  11. ^Nathalie Comte. "Europe, 1450 to 1789: Encyclopedia of the Early Modern World". Ed. Jonathan Dewald. Vol. 2. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 2004. p94-108.
  12. ^David, A. P. (2006-09-28).The Dance of the Muses: Choral Theory and Ancient Greek Poetics. OUP Oxford.ISBN 978-0-19-929240-0.
  13. ^abWang Kefen (1985).The History of Chinese Dance. China Books & Periodicals.ISBN 978-0835111867.
  14. ^Robert Hans van Gulik (1961).Sexual life in ancient China:A Preliminary Survey of Chinese Sex and Society from Ca. 1500 B.C. Till 1644 A.D. Brill. p. 222.ISBN 9004039171.
  15. ^"Chinese Foot Binding".BBC News. 16 July 2014.
  16. ^Marie-Josèphe Bossan (2004).The Art of the Shoe. Parkstone Press Ltd. p. 164.ISBN 978-1859958032.
  17. ^Taheri, Sadreddin (2012)."Dance, Play, Drama; a Survey of Dramatic Actions in Pre-Islamic Artifacts of Iran".نشریه هنرهای زیبا- هنرهای نمایشی و موسیقی.3 (43). Tehran:University of Tehran, Honarhay-e Ziba Journal.doi:10.22059/jfadram.2012.24776.
  18. ^abcdeKiann, Nima (2002)."Persian Dance History".Iran Chamber Society. RetrievedJuly 26, 2019.
  19. ^abcdeKiann, Nima (2000)."Persian Dance And Its Forgotten History".Nima Kiann. Les Ballets Persans. RetrievedJuly 14, 2014.
  20. ^abcdefTheater, Benna Crawford BA."History of African Dance".LoveToKnow. Retrieved2021-11-25.
  21. ^ab"A Brief History of Ballet – Illustrated by Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre".Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre. Retrieved2018-03-29.
  22. ^abcPicton, John."Britannica".Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved2021-11-25.
  23. ^ab"The History Of African Dance – FloDance".www.flodance.com. 10 June 2017. Retrieved2021-11-25.
  24. ^Grabsky, Phil (2000).Brazil: An Inconvenient History. British Broadcasting Corporation.
  25. ^Ntongela Masilela's essay.

Further reading

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  • Adshead-Lansdale, J. (ed.) (1994).Dance History: An Introduction. Routledge.ISBN 0-415-09030-X.
  • Charman, S. Kraus, R, G. Chapman, S. and Dixon-Stowall, B. (1990).History of the Dance in Art and Education. Pearson Education.ISBN 0-13-389362-6.
  • Dils, A. (2001).Moving History/Dancing Cultures: A Dance History Reader. Wesleyan University Press.ISBN 0-8195-6413-3.
  • Wallace, Carol McD.; et al. (1986).Dance: a very social history. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art.ISBN 9780870994869.
  • Wood, Melusine (1952).Some historical dances twelfth to nineteenth century; their manner of performance and their place in the social life of the time, London: Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing.

External links

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