"Gypsy" comes from Cecil Sharp, when he was trying to name a figure that
appeared in the literature of two dancers going around each other.
My hearsay understanding is that he named it after some Romani dances he
knew of where partners didn't touch each other.
-Chris Page
San Diego, CA
On Sat, Oct 24, 2015 at 12:12 AM, Amy Wimmer via Callers <
callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
  Hello All,
 I taught a dance this evening that included a ladies' gypsy. I received
 the email below a few minutes ago. In teaching it I wanted to convey that
 it is a flirty, eye contact sort of move. This person was obviously
 offended. I am at a loss for how to respond, except to apologize for
 offending.
 I'm pretty sure I described the move accurately. I meant absolutely no
 offense. I didn't make up the name for the move, but don't want to make
 excuses. Does this move need a new name? How would you respond?
 -Amy
 Seattle
 Begin forwarded message:
 *Subject:* *First time at your event*
 This evening, I came to one of your dances for the first time. I was
 impressed by the friendliness of the dancers, the quality of the musicians,
 and the overall fun of the dance.
 And then we got to a dance in which we were told we would be learning a
 step named after an offensive term for Romani people. And I felt
 uncomfortable. And then when the step was taught, it became clear that the
 term was so named based on stereotypes of Romani women as being overly
 sexual. And I became more uncomfortable.
 I assume that this was not done maliciously, but rather out of an
 unawareness of the ways that that term has been used to denigrate Romani
 people throughout history (much the same way that many other racial slurs
 have been used in the past by well-meaning people before they became aware
 that those terms were hurtful and harmful to those disadvantaged groups).
 Nonetheless, it felt shockingly offensive to me, all the more so in the
 context of a community that appeared to be so welcoming and accepting.
 Until that point, I had a very enjoyable time dancing at your event. I've
 been a dancer in a variety of communities for many years now, and aside
 from that issue, this was probably the best first experience I've had when
 meeting a new dance community. It was a shame that some presumably
 unintentional racial insensitivity had to ruin what was otherwise such a
 positive experience.
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