Ch. 8: The hidden Authoritarian Roots in Western Concert
Dance
By Robin Lakes
“Why is it that the onstage visions of anti-authoritarianism
and social justice do not translate into reforming educational practices in the
dance studio? What are the roots of the authoritarian pedagogical heritage of
the concert dance world?” (110).
“The authoritarian personality structure harbors such
characteristics as low opinion of human nature, punitiveness, fatalism,
contempt for the weak, cynicism, aggression, an ironic submission to authority,
intolerance for ambiguity, and projection, ascribing to another person
attitudes present in oneself” (111).
“The embedded pedagogical message is that it is acceptable
to view dancers as the raw material in dance, similar to inanimate paint. When
dancers are being utilized for an artistic vision, their thoughts and feelings
do not matter” (114).
I think the best type of rehearsal is one that troubles the
notion of the teacher/student or director/performer hierarchy. It’s important
to allow the performers to have a sense of control over what they’re doing. At
Youth Creates, every rehearsal starts the same way: we gather in a circle and
we check in. By doing this, it becomes clear that this rehearsal is a safe
space where everyone is encouraged to speak. Everyone should bring themselves
and their ideas to this rehearsal.
Similarly, at Moving in the Spirit, Dana explained to us
that she always adapts her classes to her students. Regardless of what her
original lesson plan was, she will change her class so that it best fits the
needs of the students. If her students are angry about something, how can she
incorporate movement that allows them to work through the anger?
Adapting choreography to the ensemble is imperative. This is
the only way you allow dancers to own movement as their own. When Mama Ye Ye
came in to teach an African dance workshop to Youth Creates, she asked a
student to help her teach. Mama Ye Ye said that the student should take the
choreography and adjust it because she actually knows the ensemble and has a
relationship with them. Mama Ye Ye realized that as an outsider to the ensemble
she couldn’t just barge in and tell them how they should move. Ultimately, the
student didn’t adjust the choreography very much. However, the fact that Mama
Ye Ye gave her permission to adjust it is what mattered. It still made the
ensemble feel like the choreography was theirs and like they weren’t just being
told what to do. To borrow Robin Lakes’s words, she didn’t treat the dancers
like they were just inanimate paint.
Ch. 2: Practical Imperative
"Is dance by
its nature inevitably authoritarian? Can human rights coexist with the
aims of dance, the art of the body? Or will dance be acutely bound to represent
stifled individuals, their humiliation and their desire for freedom because it
is so interlinked with suppression and violation of the human body itself? And
what would a democratic or a rights-based dance look like? Can such a thing
exist? Would this be the ultimate anti-art, so politically correct and
unprovocative, that it becomes absurdly boring?” (18).
Honestly, I’m not
sure how to answer these questions. I’ve been dancing since I was a kid and I
didn’t really start to think critically about it until…well, this summer
honestly. I am an extremely critical person, always questioning everything. In
the past, I’ve always thought very critically about my visual art and my
acting. However, I never really questioned my dance training.
I grew up with
mostly conventional dance training (ballet, jazz, and hip hop). I NEVER spoke
in dance class. I’m a pretty loud, talkative, goofy person, but in dance class
I always silently learned the choreography. I didn’t question anything.
After this summer,
I’m learning how dance allows room for personal expression. Movements can be
altered to fit the dancer. Dancers can create their own movements! There’s so
much more to dance than proper technique.
Okay, here is a
weird confusing thought I have:
I feel like no
movement will ever be “natural” (the way we hold ourselves, the way we sit,
etc.). Is doing a pirouette less natural than walking? Even the way I walk is
the result of existing within society. How does gender/socio-economics/race
affect my walk? Is there a “normal” walk? A “natural” one? I don’t think so.
Sometimes I feel like none of my choices are truly my own, because they are
influenced by all of these outside factors (and even unconscious processes). So
who am I to say certain kinds of dance isn’t natural?
I do think that what’s
important is interrogating what we consider dance. There is so much more than
ballet and modern. I think the best way to explore human rights through dance
is to open up the possibilities of what dance can be. Any purposeful movement
can be dance. Everyone moves differently (even if, as I argue, a lot of that
movement is potentially based on societal factors and unconscious processes). Instead
of dance being about forcing everyone to move in the same way, a way that is
often Eurocentric and limiting, it should open opportunities for new movement.