Ballet and The Ballet Dancer
Ballet and The Ballet Dancer
A look at ballet as an art form and the demands ballet has on the ballet dancer.
1,680 words (approx. 6.7 pages) |
6 sources |
APA | 2006
Paper Summary:
This paper takes a look at the history of the art of ballet, as well as reviews the different types of the ballet dance and the strenuous demands that ballet makes on the dancer. This paper also covers various dance choreographers and their particular styles of dance.
From the Paper:
"Classical ballet celebrates the potential harmony of the human body, the utopian ideal of collective endeavor, the possibility of the interchange between masculinity and femininity. Something of this is what has recommended ballet to the communisms of the USSR, Cuba and China. Beneath the aristocratic tat of the settings and the charming but dispensable never-never of the stories, there is an implicitly socialist vision.
Yet classical ballet must of course always come wrapped in the specifics of where and for whom it is performed, what other values and meanings it is attached to, and these are riven with contradictions. In practice, in Britain, classical ballet is, at one and the same time, elitist and popular, and woman-centered, heterosexist and part of gay male culture, universal and distinctly white. It is all of this at once.
It is selective in part because it is expensive. Not only are sets on a grand scale and not only do most of the classics require large casts, but behind all that there are the years of investment in training. "
Ballet and The Ballet Dancer (2012, January 15). Retrieved February 12, 2012, from http://www.academon.com/Essay-Ballet-and-The-Ballet-Dancer/75071
"Ballet and The Ballet Dancer" 15 January 2012. Web. 12 Feb. 2012. <http://www.academon.com/Essay-Ballet-and-The-Ballet-Dancer/75071>