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Dancing Fear and Desire

Race, Sexuality, and Imperial Politics in Middle Eastern Dance

By Stavros Stavrou Karayanni
Subjects Cultural Studies, Performing Arts
Series Cultural Studies Hide Details
Paperback : 9780889204546, 264 pages, December 2004
Ebook (EPUB) : 9781554587193, 264 pages, August 2009

Table of contents

Table of Contents for
Dancing Fear and Desire: Race, Sexuality, and Imperial Politics in Middle Eastern Dance by Stavros Stavrou Karayanni

Acknowledgements

Preface

Introducing Colonial and Postcolonial Dialectics on the Subject of Dance

Dismissal Veiling Desire: Kuchuk Hanem and Imperial Masculinity

The Dance of Extravagant Pleasures: Male Performers of the Orient and the Politics of the Imperial Gaze

Dancing Decadence: Semiotics of Dance and the Phantasm of Salomé

“I have seen this dance on old Greek vases”: Hellenism and the Worlding of Greek Dance

What Dancer from Which Dance? Concluding Reflections

Epilogue

Notes

Works Cited

Index

Description

Throughout centuries of European colonial domination, the bodies of Middle Eastern dancers, male and female, move sumptuously and seductively across the pages of Western travel journals, evoking desire and derision, admiration and disdain, allure and revulsion. This profound ambivalence forms the axis of an investigation into Middle Eastern dance—an investigation that extends to contemporary belly dance.

Stavros Stavrou Karayanni, through historical investigation, theoretical analysis, and personal reflection, explores how Middle Eastern dance actively engages race, sex, and national identity. Close readings of colonial travel narratives, an examination of Oscar Wilde’s Salome, and analyses of treatises about Greek dance, reveal the intricate ways in which this controversial dance has been shaped by Eurocentric models that define and control identity performance.

Awards

  • Winner, European Society for the Study of English (ESSE) Book Award for Cultural Studies 2006

Reviews

``To reduce Karayanni's complex work to brief description does it no justice. He examines the cultural politics of Middle Eastern dance in the nineteenth, twentieth, and early twenty-first centuries using historic images and descriptions combined with a narrative of his personal experience of Middle Eastern dance as a colonized Cypriot male homosexual. Thus the reviewer is presented with the challenge of describing the web of issues and re-presented events that necessarily surrounds autobiographical, neo-colonial, gender- and race-inflected perspectives on non-verbal art that has rarely been subject to any sort of analysis. The simplest statement I can make (as an ethnomusicologist specializing in the Middle East) is that this is probably the most satisfying work on the Middle East I have ever read. ... [T]he approach is intellectually very strong. ... With this work we have a fresh view of the complications of gender, imperialism, body, and art that challenge the still-present single-line judgement that many of us have been taught. ''

- Virginia Danielson, University of Toronto Quarterly, Letters in Canada 2006, Volume 77, Number 1, Winter 2008

``Dancing Fear and Desire...enables a much-needed, and curiously belated, conversation between postcolonial and queer studies. And it rediscovers the occulted tradition that associates critical body with critical mind. Stavros Stavrou brings genuine understanding and enormous commitment to cross-cultural scholarship, and to the exhilarating tradition of dance itself. This exuberant book gives whole new meaning to the discipline of navel-gazing.''

- Stephen Slemon, University of Alberta

``Dancing Fear and Desire bridges `the discourse of postcolonial dance and queer theory.' Through its examination of `the politics of dance--tsifteleli, belly dance [and] Oriental dance'--the book will appeal to serious students of the dance as cultural phenomenon.... An interesting mix of personal observations, subjective conclusions, and scholarly research, Karayanni's study advances our understanding of and appreciation for Middle Eastern dance forms.''

- M. Wayne Cunningham, Canadian Book Review Annual, 2006