A belated follow-up to Chrissy's "subtle point": I don't agree that it
is
subtle - I think the culture of a contra dance in a rural area is
fundamentally different than a "zesty modern urban" contra dance. We were
discussing this on the way home after the Flurry, and I truly value both.
I used to live in an area where I could get to both types of dances
(roughly halfway between Philly and Baltimore). I could get to one of the
weekly urban dances on a weeknight and then a community oriented dance on
the weekend. Now that I live halfway up the coast of Maine I don't get the
joy of the zesty urban dances I used to enjoy. I do still get the joy of
the community dances, and I am glad that the Belfast contra dance has
become such an important social setting for our many young attenders. The
strong sense of community is wonderful, but the fun dance experiences for
me are now the occasional festivals I can get to.
<bill(a)frysinger.com>
William T. Frysinger
339 Beech Hill Road
Northport, ME 04849
Office: 207-338-1850
Home: 207-338-2797
Cellphone: 207-930-5933
On Sun, Feb 18, 2018 at 7:58 PM, Chrissy Fowler via Organizers <
organizers(a)lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
Glad Heitzo reintroduced this thread, as I'd
dropped the ball on
responding to Alex. Responses below.
And about that focus group, it was lovely. We ended up with fewer
respondents than we anticipated, but what got shared was quite juicy, and
it spawned a project to further document our local dance scene. I haven't
had a chance yet to write the blog post about it, including posting the
video, but will do so soon!
www.belfastflyingshoes.org/blog
Cheers,
Chrissy Fowler
Belfast, ME
++++++++++
*Questions from Alex Deis-Lauby: Chrissy- can you tell us more about the
norms of the Belfast dance? *
Yes.
*Do the youth dancers dance both roles and with everyone? *Yes both
roles, yes with everyone. But for perhaps obvious reasons, the teens do
tend to enjoy dancing 'with their friends' and historically that has meant
that one set tends to have more teens than the others. We're working on
that, because we want all of the sets in the hall to be populated by the
teens and their good cheer/happy energy.
*Do the non-youth dancers do so as well?*
Some dance both roles, but to a much lesser degree.
*Thinking about ages and genders, who asks whom to dance?*
Anyone. Anecdote: I once told a potential new dancer, who was inquiring
about our series on the phone, "Anyone can dance with anyone, although I've
never been invited to dance by a teenager." The next night, a 13 yo girl
invited me for the first dance. Hah!
*Are there flourishes? *
Yes.
*Are the young dancers playful in role swapping or in other ways? Is that
mirrored among the older dancers or vice versa?*
I think there's generally a playful attitude at our series, but that's
across age levels. If, by 'role swapping', you mean switching roles back
and forth throughout a given dance sequence, we don't have much if any of
that, which I think is a good thing. Our dances always have a high
percentage of new and/or easily-confused dancers, and I don't think such a
practice would be fair to the other dancers. Sets would fall apart, people
would be confused. I think that would be an example of skilled dancers
indulging their own whims at the expense of the rest of the dancers in
their set, and as I said earlier, people are generally considerate of each
other at our dances.
*Do the young ppl have ample opportunity to dance with and socialize with
their peers?*
Yes. Plenty of dancing and plenty of sitting on the sides chatting.
*Is there a strong overall culture of consent? *
*Is the default: “dance with who’s coming at you”?*
Yes, to both. People are nice aka considerate to each other, in general.
Some people are insensitive, which makes me crazy as a caller/organizer.
(For example, some individuals seem to think they are being awesome dancers
when they twirl themselves and other dancers indiscriminately and
relentlessly. Ugh. If I were Angela Merkel, you know what my eyes would be
doing.) But that is not the norm.
*Do people ask what dance role preference their partners have regardless
of gender presentation? *
I don't know. I know that's what I tell people to do, as a caller
("Invite someone to dance, decide who's going to be lady and who's going to
be gent, form a ___set.") I also know that's always a conversation
whenever I, myself, get a partner, whether I'm inviting or accepting an
invitation. But I don't honestly know what the norm is across the dance
floor at our series, so I can't say.
*Other notable aspects of your dance community? *
I don't know. Um... we holler a lot?
We do tend to have a lot of families who dance with their kids, parents,
siblings, cousins, aunts/uncles, grandparents (maybe like Aaron Marcus, who
was mentioned in another response.)
And just a subtle point, I'd say it's less of a dance community and more
of a community that goes to dances. Meaning that dancing is not the only
reason that these people get together. They might see the same people at
school, church, a talk/lecture, restaurant, art opening, concert, movie,
rowing, volunteering, hiking, sledding, potlucks, etc. Perhaps a
characteristic of small town, rural county life? But our monthly dances do
seem to be treasured, which we on the board count as a great thing.
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