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UID:628e488632d223d8e1b7438a5ecb8a58
CATEGORIES:Séminaire du CREM
CREATED:20230620T143017
SUMMARY:New social dances for a new socialist life: East German experiments on the dance floor, 1951-1976, S. Hutchinson
LOCATION:Lesc – salle 308F (3e étage) - 21\, allée de l’Université\, Nanterre\, \, 9
 2000\, France
DESCRIPTION:Avec Sydney Hutchihnson*\nFrom the 1950s through the 1970s, East German cho
 reographers, dance teachers, composers, and ballroom enthusiasts worked to 
 provide their socialist comrades with new dances that would express and enc
 ourage joy in the “new life” socialism provided. Drawing ideas from US, Lat
 in American, and Eastern Bloc trends and employing their own creativity, co
 mmittees regularly put out dance ideas, premiered them in festivals, and en
 couraged “dance circles” at businesses, villages, and neighborhoods to take
  them up. Mgazines published dozens of these new choreographies and scores 
 to allow for amateur recreation, and they spanned “Modetänze” (dance trends
  or social partner dances), new folk dances, and imported international dan
 ces reworked in East German style. Only a few became popular; others were p
 erformed only on a single occasion.\nUnderstanding how these dances were cr
 eated and used, as well as what they meant in their historical context, is 
 one part of my larger project entitled “Second World Music: Latin America, 
 East Germany, and the Sonic Circuitry of Socialism.” I will speak about how
  the social dances fit into my larger investigation into the performance of
  socialist internationalism. I will also discuss the methodology I am emplo
 ying to reconstruct and perform the dances and their music as a form of par
 ticipant-observation in a no-longer-existing dance culture. Together we wil
 l explore these new creations, their choreomusical successes and failures, 
 by doing the dances ourselves and considering our own bodily experiences of
  the material.\nSydney Hutchinson is a research associate at Humboldt Unive
 rsity's Institute for Musicology and Media Studies in Berlin, Germany. Form
 erly, she was associate professor of ethnomusicology at Syracuse University
 , visiting professor at Goethe University Frankfurt, and a Humboldt fellow 
 at the Ethnological Museum Berlin. Hutchinson has published four books on L
 atin American music and dance and a translation of Dominican singer-songwri
 ter Rita Indiana's latest novel. Her most recent publications include artic
 les on choreomusicology, gender and the body in Mexican norteño music video
 s, and merengue dancing. Earlier works have won awards from the Society for
  Ethnomusicology, Society of Dance History Scholars, and American Folklore 
 Society as well as the Samuel Claro Valdés prize for Latin American musicol
 ogy.\n \n
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p><img src="https://mail.lesc-cnrs.fr/images/vstoichita/Seminaire_Hutchins
 on_2024.jpg" width="166" height="250" alt="Seminaire Hutchinson 2024" style
 ="margin-right: 10px; margin-bottom: 10px; float: left;" />Avec <strong>Syd
 ney Hutchihnson*</strong></p><p>From the 1950s through the 1970s, East Germ
 an choreographers, dance teachers, composers, and ballroom enthusiasts work
 ed to provide their socialist comrades with new dances that would express a
 nd encourage joy in the “new life” socialism provided. Drawing ideas from U
 S, Latin American, and Eastern Bloc trends and employing their own creativi
 ty, committees regularly put out dance ideas, premiered them in festivals, 
 and encouraged “dance circles” at businesses, villages, and neighborhoods t
 o take them up. Mgazines published dozens of these new choreographies and s
 cores to allow for amateur recreation, and they spanned “Modetänze” (dance 
 trends or social partner dances), new folk dances, and imported internation
 al dances reworked in East German style. Only a few became popular; others 
 were performed only on a single occasion.</p><p>Understanding how these dan
 ces were created and used, as well as what they meant in their historical c
 ontext, is one part of my larger project entitled “Second World Music: Lati
 n America, East Germany, and the Sonic Circuitry of Socialism.” I will spea
 k about how the social dances fit into my larger investigation into the per
 formance of socialist internationalism. I will also discuss the methodology
  I am employing to reconstruct and perform the dances and their music as a 
 form of participant-observation in a no-longer-existing dance culture. Toge
 ther we will explore these new creations, their choreomusical successes and
  failures, by doing the dances ourselves and considering our own bodily exp
 eriences of the material.</p><p><strong>Sydney Hutchinson</strong> is a res
 earch associate at Humboldt University's Institute for Musicology and Media
  Studies in Berlin, Germany. Formerly, she was associate professor of ethno
 musicology at Syracuse University, visiting professor at Goethe University 
 Frankfurt, and a Humboldt fellow at the Ethnological Museum Berlin. Hutchin
 son has published four books on Latin American music and dance and a transl
 ation of Dominican singer-songwriter Rita Indiana's latest novel. Her most 
 recent publications include articles on choreomusicology, gender and the bo
 dy in Mexican <em>norteño</em> music videos, and merengue dancing. Earlier 
 works have won awards from the Society for Ethnomusicology, Society of Danc
 e History Scholars, and American Folklore Society as well as the Samuel Cla
 ro Valdés prize for Latin American musicology.</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
DTSTAMP:20260429T085625
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Paris:20240129T100000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Paris:20240129T120000
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