When political protest is read as epidemic madness, religious ecstasy as nervous disease, and angular dance moves as dark and uncouth, the disorder being described is choreomania. At once a catchall term to denote spontaneous gestures and the unruly movements of crowds, choreomania emerged in the nineteenth century at a time of heightened class conflict, nationalist policy, and colonial rule. In this book, author Kelina Gotman examines these choreographies of unrest, rethinkingthe modern formation of the choreomania concept as it moved across scientific and social scientific disciplines. Reading archives describing dramatic misformationsof bodies and body politicsshe shows how prejudices against expressivity unravel, in turn revealing widespread anxieties about demonstrativeagitation. This history of the fitful body complements stories of nineteenth-century discipline and regimentation. As she notes, constraints on movement imply constraints on political power and agency. In each chapter, Gotman confronts the many ways choreomania works as an extension of discourses shaping colonialist orientalism, which alternately depict riotous bodies as dangerously infected others, and as curious bacchanalian remains. Through her research, Gotman also shows how beneath theradar of this colonial discourse, men and women gathered together to repossess on their terms the gestures of social revolt.
CONTENTS; List of illustrations; Foreword; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Choreomania, Another Orientalism; Part I: Excavating Dance in the Archives; 1. Obscuritas Antiquitatis: Institutions, Affiliations, Marginalia; 2. Madness after Foucault: Medieval Bacchanals; 3. Translatio: St. Vituss Dance, Demonism and the Early Modern; 4. The Convulsionaries: Antics on the French Revolutionary Stage; 5. Mobiles, Mobs and Monads: Nineteenth-Century Crowd Forms; 6. Medecine Retrospective: Hysterias Archival Drag; Part II: Colonial and Postcolonial Stages: Scenes of Ferment in the Field; 7. Sicily Implies Asia and Africa: Tarantellas and Comparative Method; 8. Ecstasy-belonging in Madagascar and Brazil; 9. Ghost Dancing: Excess, Waste and the American West; 10. The Gift of Seeing Resemblances: Cargo Cults in the Antipodes; 11. Monstrous Grace: Blackness and the New Dance Crazes; 12. Coda: Moving Fields, Modernity and the Bacchic Chorus; Bibliography;
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