Theatres of the Body
Dance and Discourse in Antebellum Philadelphia
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Temple University Press,U.S.
Published:18th Jul '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Theatres of the Body is Lynn Matluck Brooks’ critical examination of danced stage productions in antebellum Philadelphia. Starting in the 1820s, Brooks explores visual art and social and theatrical dancing across different classes, focusing on the work of E. W. Clay. Continuing through the 1830s, she looks at pantomime ballets and blackface minstrelsy through a political lens, asking questions regarding citizenship, slavery, and freedom. At the time, the city boasted the largest number of native-born ballet dancers in the young nation. Philadelphia also became a creative home to blackface star T. D. Rice, who helped popularize that performance genre.
Reviewing print culture in the 1840s, Brooks shows how newspapers, magazines, and popular fiction provided documentation of dancing in Philadelphia as well as the responses of dance commentators, practitioners, and moralists. Theatres of the Body also considers the interplay of science with dance in the 1850s, which impacted both dance practices and reception.
Providing an expansive historiography of these significant contributions to dance in the United States, Brooks deepens our understanding of antebellum culture and history.
“It’s a rich study of theatrical and social dance in Philadelphia in a selected period of history. Brooks includes detailed accounts of Philadelphia’s theaters and dance halls, the productions that were mounted, and the careers of major dance stars, both in ballet and blackface. At the same time, it offers a broader view of that historical period, supplying context through insights into life across social strata, through the lens of entertainment and pastimes, reaching beyond mere dates and major figures." — Broad Street Review
ISBN: 9781439923030
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
300 pages