Dancing Culture/ Globalization, Tourism and Identity in the Anthropology of Dance (Dance and Performance Studies) Kringelbach,Helene Neveu [ed.] - 1st.ed. - New york: Berghahn Books, 2012. - 228

Introduction: The Movement of Dancing Cultures Helene Neveu Kringelbach (University of Oxford) and Jonathan Skinner (Queen's University Belfast) Part I: Dance and globalisation Chapter 1. Globalization and the Dance Import/Export Business: The Jive Story Jonathan Skinner (Queen's University Belfast) Chapter 2. Ballet culture and the market: a transnational perspective Helena Wulff (University of Stockholm) Chapter 3. "We've got this rhythm in our blood": dancing identities in Southern Italy Karen Ludtke (Independent Scholar) Part II: Tourism, Social Transformation and the Dance Chapter 4. Performance in tourism: transforming the gaze and tourist encounter at Hiwus Feasthouse Linda Scarangella-McNenly (McMaster University) Chapter 5. Movement on the move: performance and dance tourism Felicia Hughes-Freeland (Swansea University) Chapter 6. Dance, visibility and representational self-awareness in an Embera community in Panama Dimitrios Theodossopoulos (University of Bristol) Part III: Dance, identity and the nation Chapter 7. Moving shadows of Casamance: dance and regionalism in Senegal Helene Neveu Kringelbach (University of Oxford) Chapter 8. Ballet Folklorico Mexicano: choreographing a national identity in a transnational context Olga Najera-Ramirez (University of California, Santa Cruz) Chapter 9. Dance, youth and changing gender identities in Korea Severine Carrausse (Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales) Chapter 10. Preparation, presentation and power: children's performances in a Balinese dance studio Jonathan McIntosh (University of Western Australia) Epilogue: Making culture Caroline Potter (University of Oxford) Notes on Contributors Bibliography Index

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