Dance and Science in the Long Nineteenth Century

The Articulate Body

Lynn Matluck Brooks editor Sariel Golomb editor Garth Grimball editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University Press of Florida

Publishing:1st Sep '26

£20.99

This title is due to be published on 1st September, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Dance and Science in the Long Nineteenth Century cover

Revealing the interplay and influence of dance and science during an age of colonial expansion

Bringing together dance and science, two paradigms that explore the nature and possibilities of the body, this volume illuminates the meanings and articulations of dance in nineteenth-century societies. This global collection of studies reveals how the two fields informed each other’s development and engaged with dominant European worldviews in a time of unprecedented colonial expansion.

The chapters in Dance and Science in the Long Nineteenth Century examine how trends and developments in the performing arts reflected scientific thinking of this era, including the categorization of “types” of bodies and the ranking of cultural and religious beliefs, as well as how dance served as an active site of inquiry where the workings and limits of the human body could be studied. Researchers discuss topics including the influence of plant biology on the aesthetics of ballet, technological advancements in the staging and recording of performances, arguments for the use of Eurhythmics in promoting a stronger “race,” and European fascination with Indian dance and yoga.

Featuring response essays that put leading scholars in conversation with one another and offer new perspectives, this volume is unique in its geographic scope and its discussion of diverse bodies, cultures, themes, and scientific disciplines. It sheds light on a historical interplay that has shaped many of today’s political and cultural realities.

“Against the claims of nineteenth-century practitioners that their science was increasingly empirical and factual, these essays offer new and compelling evidence—through sources focused on dance—that science was deeply informed by the complexities of the human body. Readers . . . will be rewarded with new insights and new sources to consider, whether their interest is in nineteenth-century science or in dance of that period.”—H-Net

“The authors collectively argue that scientific epistemologies articulated a definition of the body that made its way into dance contexts. . . . Simultaneously, the authors show by example how one can use dance studies methodologies such as choreographic analysis or attention to the embodied encounter of spectatorship to challenge the articulations of the body we have inherited from the long nineteenth century.”—Dance Chronicle

ISBN: 9780813081816

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

334 pages