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Dance programs such as this one for the Grand Centennial Military and
Civic Ball highlighted the events and music for the evening.
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One of the goals of the Society's Center for Historic
American Visual Culture (CHAVIC) is to engage students and scholars
with American prints and ephemera to enhance our understanding of
America's history and culture. A life-long interest in classical ballet
led Meghan Meade, a student at the College of the Holy Cross in Worcester
and Graphics
Arts Intern, to undertake a project describing the history of social
dance. The content of the project is driven by the holdings of the Society
and we are pleased to present her work as a supplement to present
scholarship; we encourage others to develop this topic using the Society's
collections. |
The illustrations and
objects depicted in this exhibition provide a brief glimpse into the
history of
social dance. The abundance of artwork and social
artifacts available attest to dance's importance throughout American
history. Featured is not only its origin, fashion and forms, but also the
unspoken language of dance. Always moving, always changing, dancing has
never failed to enchant American society.
In the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries, dance became a
forum for purposeful social activity; elaborate balls and private parties
offered a means for a gentleman to seek his wife and allowed friends and
family to share the new trends in music and dance. In the political
sphere, balls provided a setting for politicians to exhibit their wealth
and standing by their knowledge of the most fashionable dances.
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Descriptions of
costumes
and parties are located in some diaries at the Society, one of which is
Anna Quincy Thaxter Cushing's. The text provides an account of a Bal
Masque on February 26, 1858. A PDF of the transcription of the event is
available here. Click here
to see the catalog record and other details of the Anna
Quincy Thaxter Cushing papers.
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ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE |
Many dances had
specific steps and figures, while others were themed; military dances
were both. This sheet music cover of
“Quadrille Millitaire: Les Hussards” demonstrates
this military theme and shows the formal and disciplined positions of the
body.
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ON IMAGE TO ENLARGE |
Early
Americans were
significantly restricted in their forms of communication.
Because it was considerably
inaccessible, communication was very valuable to eighteenth
and
nineteenth century Americans. Limited technology meant
limited
communication which in turn created an environment where
people could
not contact each other with the ease and comfort we enjoy in
modern society.
The social institution of
dance provided
an arena for people to communicate with each other through
the use of
non-verbal and culturally acceptable movements and
gestures.
Since social values and rank were conveyed through movement
and bodily
expression, mastering dance technique was paramount to
those who wanted to be accepted by elite society. With just
a tip of a hat
or a twirl of a parasol, one could announce his or her
interest in another
individual without so much as saying a word. |
As a cultural melting pot, America welcomed a variety of
dances. The stately and ceremonial minuet came from France, freewheeling
country-dances arrived from England, and lively hornpipes and reels
flooded in from Scotland and Ireland. Countless other dances were the
products of cultural mixing; some dances originated in one country and
traveled through several others before infiltrating American culture.
Some dances now considered characteristically “American” can
be traced back to European roots.
Dancing was not always
received openly by society as a whole. Certain conservative and religious
groups objected to the practice of dance, and delivered harsh criticisms
and condemnations to prevent recklessness and disorder. These obstacles
diminished over time as changing cultural circumstances gave rise to an
era in which dance was not only as an amusement but also a powerful
social tool. |
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One example of a dance traveling from one culture to the
American dance scene is the Kaliszanka Polka. View details of the hands, feet and body positions of the dancers or
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IMAGE TO ENLARGE |

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