|
September 2, 2002
'The Work of Dance' focuses on 1930s America
By Ann M. Gibb
Consider this recent New York Times headline: "Radio City
and the Rockettes Reach Labor Agreement." While the juxtaposition
of high kicks and labor actions might appear odd, a new book by Mark
Franko, professor of theater arts at UCSC, shows the relationship has
roots going back 70 years.
 |
|
Theater Arts professor Mark Franko looks at the relationship
between dance and ideology.
|
In The Work of Dance, Franko argues that dance and labor were
profoundly interrelated in 1930s America, when the economy was stalled
by depression, political emotions ran strong, and the Federal Dance
and Theater Projects brought more and more Americans to dance both as
performers and audience members.
Workers began to take on dance as their expressive idiom.
"The 1930s was a period of ideological strife, and the dance world
was also divided up," said Franko. "The way that dance genres
and choreographic forms were being developed at that time had everything
to do with the ideological concepts of groups of people."
The Work of Dance extends the study of dance beyond the "high
art" of ballet to include the genres of chorus dancing and modern
dance. Franko's research shows the development of modern dance in the
1930s went hand-in-hand with the development of a collective, and also
individually oriented, expression of emotion.
This expression paralleled some of the feeling behind contemporary
political movements, particularly American communism.
"A close analysis of dances in terms of the emotional expression,"
said Franko, "allows us to get a more historically scrupulous analysis
of the political intent behind the dances."
Franko also found relationships between the development of choreographic
structures--organizing people in dance performances--and the administrative
structures of politics--organizing people in social acts. "If you
could get people to do dance performances, they could also do social
acts. And the courage to strike did not differ greatly from the 'guts'
required to dance in front of an audience," said Franko.
A dancer and choreographer himself, Franko cites a memory which inspired
his research for The Work of Dance. As a teenager studying dance,
he took classes at a studio on the second floor of a building in New
York City's garment district. The room had one wall of windows overlooking
the street.
"Sweating through my dance class I was keenly aware that dance
was indeed hard work and took tremendous labor," said Franko. "And
every time I was in class at five o'clock, I'd see all these workers,
en masse, flooding out onto the street after finishing their day's work.
It made a connection in my mind, the connection between dance and work."
Return to Front Page
|