Hi Tavi et al,
I have to challenge you on your history. As a lover of chestnuts, in which the vast majority of courtesy turns are same gender as the dances are proper, and a one time historical dancer, I find your conception of the history of courtesy turn flawed. In the 18th and 19th century, there was no right hand touching any part of the lady during the historical versions of these moves. A Chaine Anglaise (English chain) is the precursor to a right and left through, and was done with a right hand half turn across or pull by, and then an open left hand turn, with the gent swiveling to face in at the last moment. The courtesy being that the lady did not have to alter her body position. Chaine des dames, ladies chain, entailed the gents casting out over their left shoulder to loop into a position to left hand turn the ladies who had turned half by the right. No leading. Just everyone attending to their place in the dance. Eventually, gents began doing what looked more like an escorting of the lady, holding their right arm in a non touching curve behind the ladies backs. I promise you, in the contredanses and quadrilles, there was no more active role for the gents than the ladies. The dances were often complex and every dancers had to know all the details if the set were to succeed.
So this whole courtesy turn as we know it is a 20th century thing, and the hyper flourishing a phenomenon of the last decade or two, which seemed to me to have come in about the time swing had a renaissance in the late eighties. Till then, if any flourish occurred, it was a single twirl to the right hand dancer. And I have a theory for its existence. In many old halls, space is at a premium, and lines were crowded. Doing the twirl allows couples to slot through a narrow gap one at a time, no elbow jostling in the attempt to turn as a joined couple. Fundamentally, historically, chains and R&L thru, are symmetrical, move as a unit, with the CT action in the joined left hand. There is no scooping or leading in that right hand, and in fact attempting to do so tends to unbalance the couple, allowing neither to retain a nice upright posture.
Let's not conflate squares and contras either. I'd have to agree that squares have frequently been taught and called, by men, as if the men were leading. Which if you dance them, is utter nonsense. If the ladies aren't fully in chArge of where they have to go, the square will break down. In a singer, language like put her on the right is just filler, not an indication of what's actually happening. For sure perpetuated by what was once, and may still be, a male dominated calling culture, I still think we ought to discuss squares separately from contras.
I'm all down with you that the dance has become very /lead left, follow right/ in recent times. But let's not blame the dance form itself.
Do I think that habitual gent/left dancers would be more courteous about flourishes if they were flourished more often themselves? Sure! We could easily write dances that put them on the right and do courtesy turn moves from there. Or just dance chestnuts, with same gender rights and lefts. But do them in a modern flourishy style.
Beyond that, the aspect of the culture which is most to blame is the idea that it matters which sex person stands on the right. If we all danced both sides, and no one thought a thing about it, everyone would learn to flourish and be flourished, and it wouldn't be seen as the province of men to twirl women, or even of left to twirl right dancers. I'll look again at the left hand chain choreo, but as I remember it, none of it is particularly exceptional and worthy outside of the left chain, which right now seems novel, but if we did it all the time, would not seem special at all. You have not persuaded me, Tavi, that there's a compelling reason to add left chains to the repertoire, especially considering many people have trouble with R vs L already, and new dancers doubly so as they are busy absorbing so many new concepts. Talk to me about flow and moving people around or something, but address gender issues where they originate, in the expectation that men dance left, women right.
Cheers,
Andrea
Sent from my external brain