The Oxford Handbook of Dance and the Popular Screen

The Oxford Handbook of Dance and the Popular Screen

THE OXFORD HANDBOOK OF DANCE AND THE POPULAR SCREEN

Edited by Melissa Blanco Borelli

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction: Dance on Screen

Melissa Blanco Borelli

Screened Histories

1. A Cyborg in Paris: Moulin Rouge!and prosthetic memory

Claire Parfitt-Brown

2. A Different Kind of Ballet: Rereading Dorothy Arzner’sDance Girl Dance

Mary Simonson

3. Communities of Practice: Active and Affective Viewing of Ballroom, the Charleston and the Twist on the Popular Screen

Alexandra Harlig

4. Disciplining Black Swan, Animalizing Ambition

Ariel Osterweis

5. Gene Kelly: The Original, Updated

Mary Fogarty

6. Appreciation – Appropriation – Assimilation: Stormy Weather and the Hollywood History of Black Dance

Susie Trenka

7. Impossible Moves: Early Hip Hop, B-Boying and Hollywood Production

Thomas DeFrantz

The Commercial Big Screen

8. Dirty Dancing: Dance, Class, and Race in the Pursuit of Womanhood

Colleen Dunagan and Roxane Fenton

9. Displace and Be Queen: Gender and Interculturalism in Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004)

Cindy García

10. “It’s Sort of ‘Members Only’”: Transgression and Body Politics in Save the Last Dance

Inna Arzumanova

11. “The White Girl in the Middle:” The Performativity of Race, Class, and Gender in Step Up 2: The Streets

Raquel Monroe

12. Affect-ive Moves: Violence, Space, and the Body in RIZE’s krump dancing

Stephanie L. Batiste

13. A Taste of Honey: Choreographing Mulatta in the Hollywood Dance Film

Melissa Blanco Borelli

14. “He’s doing his Superman thing again”: Moving Bodies in The Matrix

Derek A. Burrill

The Music Video and Televisual Bodies

15. Girl Power, Real Politics: Dis/Respectability, Post-Raciality and the Politics of Inclusion

TakiyahNur Amin

16. ‘Sexiness’ in disguise: Dancing ‘Chinese-American’ in Coco Lee’s Hip Hop Tonight (2006)

Chih-Chieh Liu

17. Single Ladies, Plural: Racism, Scandal and Authenticity within the Multiplication of Online Discourses

Philippa Thomas

18. The Dance Factor: Hip Hop, Spectacle and Reality Television

Laura Robinson

19. Defining Dance, Creating Commodity: The Rhetoric of So You Think You Can Dance

Alexis A. Weisbrod

Screening Nationhood

20. Hatchets and Hairbrushes: Dance, Gender, and Improvisational Ingenuity in Cold War Western Musicals

KathaleenBoche

21. Cuba: Understanding the Revolution through Dance(d) Scenes

Victor Fowler (translated by Tom Phillips)

22. Shine Your Light on the World: The Utopian Bodies of Dave Chappelle’s Block Party

Rosemary Candelario

23. Snake Dances and Marriageable Daughters: Defining Self and Nation in Bride and Prejudice

AmitaNijhawan

Cyber Screens

24. Monstrous Belonging: Performing ‘Thriller’ After 9/11

Harmony Bench

25. 'Dancing between the break beats': contemporary urban Indigenous thought and cultural expression through hip-hop

KarynRecollet

26. Dancing With Myself: Dance Central, Choreography and Embodiment

Derek Burrill and Melissa Blanco Borelli

Conclusion

27. Values in Motion: Reflections on Popular Screen Dance

SherrilDodds