AKICOLJ

Sat, Jul. 12th, 2008 11:56 pm
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[personal profile] oyceter
Would anyone who watches a lot of Bollywood movies be willing to watch this and tell me how the dancing is? (possible spoilers for So You Think You Can Dance Top 12)

I am really really happy about more cultures being represented on the show (Chinese folk dancing pleeeaaaseeeee?), but I haven't watched enough Bollywood dancing myself to be able to tell about technique and etc., and I'm pretty sure the judges haven't either. Also, I think a lot of the praise from the judges is coming from just having a Bollywood dance on the show; I remember when a couple did lindy hop last year, the judges so did not pick up on a lot of the little technique problems that they would have for a more familiar genre like ballroom.

(Also, while I like Katee and cheer for her, my reaction was also, "What, how can you not know what Bollywood is?!")

Also also, while I am here, commentary on the African jazz piece very welcome!

(no subject)

Sat, Jul. 12th, 2008 05:21 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] morgan-dhu.livejournal.com
I was so happy to see them doing a Bollywood-style dance. I only know what I see in the movies, so I can't really say how good the technique was, but it seemed to be pretty good. Although as others have said, I thought it was more of a chorus dance with just two people than a romantic dance between two leads.

I really do hope that they can continue to work with that choreographer, or other choreographers out of Bollywood. Wouldn't it be great to see every couple doing one Bollywood number over the course of the competition?

(no subject)

Sun, Jul. 13th, 2008 07:46 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] morgan-dhu.livejournal.com
I would so love to see more authentic world dance choreographed by people from and trained in the traditions. Indian, Pacific Islander, Chinese, African, North American aboriginal... there are so many different dance traditions from each of these cultures.

I have been a little bit, well, unsure about some of the African-influenced dances they've done. The dancing itself has been great, and I think the choreographer(s) involved have been respectful, but... why are the dancers always, it seems, dressed as Hollywood "savages"?

Mind you, I struggle with cultural appropriation issues all the time, because I'm a white person who is drawn to a great many cultural, artistic, philosophical and spiritual traditions from other cultures, many of which have been colonised, oppressed and exoticised by the West. I can only hope I'm being respectful, not appropriative. But it makes me perhaps hypersensitive when I see representations of other cultures in Western media.

(no subject)

Sat, Jul. 26th, 2008 05:15 pm (UTC)
Posted by [identity profile] morgan-dhu.livejournal.com
Re: dance that is based on animal movement

It just struck me that while Western culture represents dance from African traditions that draws on animal movement as "savage" and "animalistic," movement in the martial arts - primarily from Asian traditions - which also draws on animal movement is not characterised that way. Even though movement that is both a fighting style as well as (often) a meditative art has potentials for violence that dance doesn't. Because white Western culture has a different set of stereotypes for describing Asian culture.

I haven't seen enough Western comment on/representation of the fighting styles developed in Central and South America from a fusion of African and American Aboriginal traditions to know if they are more likely to be characterised as savage, primitive or animalistic.

But it wouldn't surprise me if they were.

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