Exotic Identities: Dance, Difference, and Self-fashioning
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-2011
Publication Title
Journal of Folklore Research
Volume
48
Issue
1
First page number:
1
Last page number:
36
Abstract
In this article, we present two independent ethnographic studies——one examining belly dancing by white women in Central Ohio and one examining the salsa dance scene in the culturally diverse municipalities of Northern New Jersey——in order to complicate our understanding of how and why people draw upon traditions of cultural Others in their expressive behavior. We argue that dancers' accounts of their dancing experiences reveal these practices to be forms of self-fashioning aimed in part at liberating the dancing subject from restrictive and disciplinary identity categories. Through ethnographic comparison we explore embodied practices as distinct from representational practices of exotic othering.
Keywords
Ethnographic studies; Exotic identities; Belly dancing; Salsa dancing; Cultural traditions; Self-fashioning
Disciplines
Anthropology | Social and Behavioral Sciences | Social and Cultural Anthropology
Language
English
Repository Citation
Bock, S.,
Borland, K.
(2011).
Exotic Identities: Dance, Difference, and Self-fashioning.
Journal of Folklore Research, 48(1),
1-36.
http://dx.doi.org/10.2979/jfolkrese.48.1.1