Angela, ah....I see said the blind person. Now it makes sense. Will not
work in my home ultra conservative community and I will certainly need to
practice replacing. It will be interesting to say the least.
Thanks again!
On Oct 15, 2017 12:21 AM, "Angela DeCarlis" <aedecarlis(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hi Mary! A lot has already been written on the subject
elsewhere, but the
summary of why Larks and Ravens has become a great set of terms is that
they correlate to the (L)eft and (R)ight positions at the end of a swing.
The syllable count is the same when compared to Gent and Lady (or Man and
Woman, for that matter), and the terms don't conflict with any dance
instructions (like how Lead and Follow would, especially if used to call
for English or Square Dancing).
Another great set of terms are Jets and Rubies, but I've found those
labels to be more arbitrary...the main advantage is that the words are
phonetically similar to Gents and Ladies...and I'm not sure whether or not
that's a good thing!
I hope this helps clarify things for you, and I thank you in advance for
keeping an open mind about trying these new, genderfree terms soon! In the
communities I've danced in, I can't tell you how much of a positive
difference these terms have made for individual dancers and for the
communities on the balance. But again, more on that can be read elsewhere,
and I hope to write in with more about my personal experiences as a caller
and dance organizer soon!
Angela
On Oct 14, 2017 2:09 PM, "Mary Collins" <nativedae(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Ahem Tom...that would be "gender" lol....Seriously, being of the more
> mature (and I use that term loosely) set, I find all these new names for
> ROLES to be troublesome and tiresome. Who exactly is a Lark & who exactly
> are Ravens? Because quite frankly I have mental pictures of both....from
> literature and music and they could be as offending as gents & ladies or
> women & men....not to try to start anything here. I am just trying to
> grasp something that seems to be just a wee bit beyond my reach. Several
> of my fellow traveling dance friends (of similar age) do not understand
> these terms either. Since I plan to be traveling and hopefully calling in
> "your community" sometime, I'd really like to get a handle on this.
>
> Mary "24" Collins
>
>
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> “Life is not about waiting for the storms to pass ... it's about learning
> to dance in the rain!” ~ Unknown
>
> On Sat, Oct 14, 2017 at 12:15 PM, Tom Hinds <twhinds(a)earthlink.net>
> wrote:
>
>> Thanks Angela. If only we could easily change our gender so we could
>> understand what it's like to be the other sex.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On Oct 14, 2017, at 11:32 AM, Angela DeCarlis wrote:
>>
>> Tom, I had this conversation with Sue Rosen this summer. Women who
>> belong to the original Feminist generation (like Sue and, presumably, like
>> Mary and Martha above) were involved in a cultural movement to abolish the
>> word "Lady", along with its restrictive connotations, in favor of
"Woman".
>> The latter label, I understand, was one which lent more power and ownership
>> to its wearers, and so was preferable. You could be however you were,
>> "ladylike" or not, and still be a Woman. (others, please chime in if
I've
>> gotten anything wrong or missed anything!)
>>
>> My generation has an opposite problem: due to the modern-day Gender
>> Revolution, wherein we seek to abolish the gender dichotomy, terms like
>> "Woman" and "Man" feel too restrictive and denotative.
"Lady" and "Gent"
>> feel almost more comfortable to some, since they are words that are
>> slightly more flexible, in some ways.
>>
>> One of the biggest problems for both groups, I think, is when the terms
>> are used interchangeably.
>>
>> This is one of my favorite things to think about when it comes to role
>> terms in dance today! I *love* our community's intergenerationality, and
>> learning about each other through conversations like this!
>>
>> Eventually I hope to get around to writing in about the changes I've
>> seen at BIDA since switching to Larks and Ravens at the beginning of the
>> summer. It's been truly remarkable!
>>
>> 'Til then,
>> Angela
>>
>> On Oct 14, 2017 9:26 AM, "Mary Collins via Callers" <
>> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>
>>> Martha, I dont recall this dance of which you speak. Could you share
>>> the true title and calls? Thanks! I also cringe over ladies (I don't fit
>>> that tradition) yet it is a good "place holder, ROLE identifer" for
my
>>> communities.
>>>
>>> On Oct 14, 2017 9:06 AM, "Tom Hinds via Callers" <
>>> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>
>>>> I must have fallen asleep during a discussion of "ladies".
What's the
>>>> issue?
>>>>
>>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>>
>>>> > On Oct 11, 2017, at 12:13 PM, Martha Wild via Callers <
>>>> callers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>> >
>>>> > I’ve got a gypsy star dance (I actually call it “Star Wrong” and
not
>>>> just because of the g-word, but because if you say “gypsy star”
everybody
>>>> starts to gypsy and NOT star, so I gave up on that confusing
terminology).
>>>> Haven’t seen another dance like it. The move from mad robin into the
star
>>>> wrong actually flows quite well. I use men and women for roles, not
>>>> genders. When I first started calling, we considered “lady” to be a four
>>>> letter word - women’s movement and bra burning and all that. I still
find
>>>> it hard to use the word “lady” and not bristle. Times have changed, now
>>>> people bristle at men and women. Go figure. I didn’t correct the
“g-word”
>>>> use on this version
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>>>
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>>
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