Movies, Moves and Music - The Sonic World of Dance Films - Mark Evans

Movies, Moves and Music - The Sonic World of Dance Films - Mark Evans

‘Anything But Ballet’: Individuality, Genre-Bending, and Sexual Expression in Center Stage

Movies, Moves and Music - The Sonic World of Dance Films - Mark Evans

Gillian Turnbull [+-]
Ryerson University
Gillian Turnbull holds a Ph.D. in ethnomusicology from York University. Her research focuses on Western Canadian roots and country music, and issues of independence, western identity, and community. She is the author of the forthcoming book, Roots Music in Calgary, Alberta, co-editor of the forthcoming anthology, Grassland Sounds: Popular and Folk Musics of the Canadian Praries, edits the Canadian Folk Music bulletin, and teaches at Ryerson University in Toronto.

Description

This chapter argues that the employment of popular music throughout Center Stage functions to break the impenetrability of ballet, securing its place within a more commercial (or lowbrow) mainstream, while elevating popular music to the role of reconstructing ideas about classical dance. It also explores how genre determines individual and sexual expression, manifested in the overt declaration of masculine and feminine identities in movement and in the use of alternative gestures in classical ballet, which similarly disrupt conventional notions about ballet traditions. Rock and pop music further enable the characters in Center Stage to use alternative gestures in order to disentangle the standard gender roles that still dominate ballet.

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Citation

Turnbull, Gillian. ‘Anything But Ballet’: Individuality, Genre-Bending, and Sexual Expression in Center Stage. Movies, Moves and Music - The Sonic World of Dance Films. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 150-166 Jan 2016. ISBN 9781845539580. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=27434. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.27434. Jan 2016

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