Oh hooray! Divisive politics are my favorite! (Not) But somewhere in the SW archives
I've already pointed out what a waste of time it is to point fingers and deride each
other. So just a couple other things, starting with an example.
On David Chandler's note of openness to new experiences, a year or so ago our dance
series celebrated the DEFFA Board (DownEast Friends of the Folk Arts) and hired a fiddler
and several dance callers who were DEFFA board members. Given the expertise of the
callers, the program included a Czech mixer-Doudlebska Polka, an English Country
Dance-Knole Park, a Croatian dance-Moja Diridika, and several contras (mostly modern
compositions). Because none of the callers considered themselves skilled at calling
squares, there were no squares. In some ways, this program was a first for public contra
dances in Maine.
But (a) it seemed like everyone had a good time (dancers, callers, organizers, and even
musicians who were asked to learn some unfamiliar music), and (b) it was still delivering
our dance's usual fare -- namely, accessible, fun, traditional social dances, taught
& prompted, and danced to excellent live music. And on the plus side, we were also
celebrating the varied contributions to the world of the board members who serve our local
folk organization - board work that is done, as Linda Leslie points out, with "good
intentions" and "for the love of the art forms."
What I got out of David Millstone's original post was a cautionary note - asking us as
dance leaders (organizers, callers, dancers) to be conscious of the perils of rareifying
or stultifying our social dance traditions (making them so complex/exclusive or
proscriptive/rigid that they lose their capacity to live on into the future in good
health.) So, I got out of it an exhortation to consider sustainability, but I also got a
reminder that we are connected inextricably to history - this isn't some brand new
movement. It's got deep, strong roots. And it's not a dead form. It's got
branches. And quite thankfully, it's got richness of variety. There's something
for everyone, thanks to the variety of visions of the organizers who make these dances
happen. But at the core it's about participatory social dance. And I say, the more
people who join us in participatory social dance, the better. (Even if you don't want
to think about dance as positive social change...)
Dance on,
Chrissy Fowler
Belfast, ME