|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Andrea Harris (Assistant Professor of Dance, Assistant Professor of Dance, University of Wisconsin-Madison)Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc Imprint: Oxford University Press Inc Dimensions: Width: 15.50cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 23.10cm Weight: 0.408kg ISBN: 9780199342242ISBN 10: 0199342245 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 16 November 2017 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of Contents"Introduction 1. Modernism and American Ballet Interchapter 1. Americana Ballet I: Billy the Kid 2. Lincoln Kirstein's Social Modernism and the Cultural Front Interchapter 2. Americana Ballet II: Rodeo 3. Edwin Denby's Objectivist Modernism and the New York School Interchapter 3. Americana Ballet III: Western Symphony 4. The Making of an American Ballet Institution in Europe in the Cultural Cold War Conclusion: ""We drink the health of the guy that died."" Bibliography Index"ReviewsIn Andrea Harris' riveting account of Making Ballet American Balanchine, Kirstein, and Denby did not turn away from politics at mid-century, as we have mistakenly believed, but rather created neoclassical ballet from an alert engagement with the crises of their time. An astonishing and lucid history, revisionist scholarship at its brilliant best! -Susan Manning, Northwestern University Making Ballet American is a remarkable tale of two men-Lincoln Kirstein, the brilliant apologist for ballet, and Edwin Denby, the poet of dance critics-who, together and separately, championed George Balanchine's ballet neoclassicism as the cynosure of American ballet. But the book's historical synthesis is even more gripping, focusing on how modernist artists and thinkers from all walks of American culture confronted the deep, underlying fears of the twentieth century: mass media's potential to create unthinking mobs, in the guise of fascism, totalitarianism, and even unbridled capitalism. At last, a critical intellectual history of twentieth-century ballet in America-one that is particularly resonant in our time, and full of irony, as individuals initially driven by countercultural and nonconformist values erect elite institutions guaranteed to quash alternative voices! -Joellen Meglin, Temple University Andrea Harris's Making Ballet American is a remarkable tale of two men - Kirstein, the brilliant ballet entrepreneur, and Denby, the poet of dance critics - who, together and separely, championed Balanchine's neoclassicism as the cynosure of American ballet. But the book's historical synthesis is even more gripping, focusing on how modernist artists and thinkers from all walks of American culture confronted the deep, underlying fears of the twentieth century: mass media's potential to create unthinking mobs in the guise of fascism, totalitarianism, and even unbridled capitalism. At last, a critical intellectual history of twentieth-century ballet in America - one that is particularly resonant in our time, and full of irony, as individuals initially driven by countercultural and nonconformist values erect elite institutions guaranteed to quash alternative voices! * Joellen Meglin, Dance Chronicle * With this book, her first, Harris (Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison) makes an important contribution to analyses of 20th-century American ballet. She positions American ballet, especially the neoclassical works of George Balanchine and the New York City Ballet, within broad international contexts-artistic, cultural, political, and social developments during the period from the Depression through the Cold War. Her method is to alternate chapters and interchapters. The chapters complicate the development of American ballet modernism by using detailed critical study of the writings of Balanchine's sponsor Lincoln Kirstein and dance critic Edwin Denby. The interchapters provide close readings of the American ballets Billy the Kid (1938), Rodeo (1942), and Western Symphony (1954). These help anchor the more theoretical writing in specific danced examples. * Choice * Andrea Harris's Making Ballet American is a remarkable tale of two men - Kirstein, the brilliant ballet entrepreneur, and Denby, the poet of dance critics - who, together and separely, championed Balanchine's neoclassicism as the cynosure of American ballet. But the book's historical synthesis is even more gripping, focusing on how modernist artists and thinkers from all walks of American culture confronted the deep, underlying fears of the twentieth century: mass media's potential to create unthinking mobs in the guise of fascism, totalitarianism, and even unbridled capitalism. At last, a critical intellectual history of twentieth-century ballet in America - one that is particularly resonant in our time, and full of irony, as individuals initially driven by countercultural and nonconformist values erect elite institutions guaranteed to quash alternative voices! * Joellen Meglin, Dance Chronicle * Author InformationAndrea Harris is Assistant Professor of Dance at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and a Certified Movement Analyst. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |