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A Sense of Shifting

Queer Artists Reshaping Dance

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Enter the groundbreaking world of queer dance in this gorgeous collection of stories and photographs.
Two women hold each other tight as they dance the two-step. A fierce-eyed man in a long red dress performs flamenco. A dancer improvises in a blooming garden, blending diverse influences into a style all their own. This book showcases twelve individual artists and dance companies who are reclaiming traditional genres and building inclusive dance communities. Whether professionals or amateurs, ballerinas or experimental performers, pole dancers or line dancers, these artists embody the queer experience in unique ways. Photographer Yael Malka invites us into an intimate, visceral experience of rehearsals and performances, and writer Coco Romack offers wide-ranging reflections on the creative process drawn from in-depth interviews with the dancers. This beautiful book documents the rise of a new generation of artists and will inspire dance lovers, LGBTQIA+ creators, and anyone who delights in the power of the human body in motion.
INSPIRING STORIES: The stories in this book represent a distinctive slice of the LGBTQIA+ experience. For dancers, whose art form is inseparable from their bodies, gender expression entwines with creative expression in challenging and liberating ways. The artists featured here generously explore their journeys in the interviews, while the photographs show the joy to be found in the queer dance community.
BEAUTIFUL PRIDE GIFT: This collection is the perfect gift for anyone interested in the intersections of art, identity, and activism. With a deluxe art-book treatment and stunning photographs, the book can be proudly displayed on your coffee table or presented to the creative activist in your life.
INCLUSIVE AND INTERSECTIONAL: This collection highlights a truly diverse array of experiences. The stories delve into the experiences of dancing in a wheelchair, navigating the intersections of gender and race, engaging with cultural inheritance on one's own terms, and even striving to make non-activist art when simply existing as a queer person can be a political action. The various dance styles and body types featured emphasize this book's welcoming, inclusive tone. Whether you love to dance or watch from the audience, identify as LGBTQIA+ or as an ally, this book is for you.
Perfect for:
  • Dancers and dance enthusiasts
  • People interested in contemporary dance styles and dance companies
  • Fans of portrait and performance photography
  • LGBTQIA+ artists, activists, and allies
  • Readers seeking inspiring art and stories
  • Fans of portrait anthologies and storytelling projects like Humans of New York
  • Fans of LGBTQIA+ photobooks like Loving: a Photographic History of Men In Love 1850s–1950s, We Are Everywhere, and Queer Love In Color
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    • Reviews

      • Publisher's Weekly

        February 12, 2024
        For this kinetic illustrated survey, Romack (Queer), assistant managing editor of T magazine, teams up with photographer Malka to capture queer performers who are destabilizing spaces usually reserved for traditional dance. Running the stylistic gamut from hip-hop to ballet, chapters highlight San Francisco’s “Sundance Stompede,” a country western festival where queer dancers reclaim “Wild West aesthetics” from the genre’s sometimes-heteronormative associations; how queer themes subtly animate the work disability arts ensemble Kinetic Light does to challenge mainstream concepts of accessibility; and queer performance artist NIC Kay, who incorporates clips of such internet dance trends as the Renegade into their pieces to demonstrate how Black dance practices have been historically co-opted. While some entries are stronger than others (despite excellent photos, an essay on the Masterz at Work Dance Family offers relatively little background on their dance style), at its best the collection provides a revealing peek into a lively and innovative queer dance scene. It’s an expressive ode to the art form’s breadth, depth, and diversity. Photos. Agent: Ayla Zuraw-Friedland, Frances Goldin Literary.

      • Library Journal

        May 1, 2024

        This show-and-tell celebration of contemporary dance influencers spotlights the interconnection of this embodied art form and varied queer experiences. Through photographs and essays, the book grants an inside look into the processes of boundary-pushing dancers and choreographers who perform in a variety of styles: ballet, country-western social dance, post-modern, flamenco, and much more. Central to the book's appeal are Malka's (The Views) photographs, which are works of art in their own right. The evocative images are complemented by Romack's (assistant managing editor, T: The New York Times Style Magazine; Queer: Powerful Voices, Inspiring Ideas) sensitive descriptions of the movement styles and the motivations behind the people profiled, which are mainly told in the dancers' own words. Readers looking for an analysis of queerness in dance will find this is a good starting point, but it's not an in-depth scholarly work. VERDICT This book about innovative creators who bring their true selves to their art form and contribute to its evolution will appeal to dance audiences, professionals, and students. An excellent choice for libraries looking to add to their dance collections.--Shannon Titas

        Copyright 2024 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    Formats

    • Kindle Book
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    • EPUB ebook

    Languages

    • English

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