Yep. That happened back in 2001. They try from time to time. Luckily it
hasn't been successful... too many other vernacular dances of the US to
pick one.
Nancy
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 7:57 AM Chris J Brady chrisjbrady(a)yahoo.com
[trad-dance-callers] <trad-dance-callers(a)yahoogroups.com> wrote:
Just received an alert about this ...
https://www.academia.edu/830056/Reflections_on_the_Hearing_to_Designate_the…
Reflections on the Hearing to" Designate the Square Dance as the American
Folk Dance of the United States": Cultural Politics and an American
Vernacular Dance …
Yearbook for traditional music, 2001
Colin Quigley
Dance in its socio-political aspects,&quot; one theme of the ICTM
Ethnochoreology Sub-Group Symposium at which this paper was presented1, was
a timely one immediately following, as it did, the Los Angeles riots of
spring 1992. At that time, one could open the arts section of a newspaper
or magazine to find debate raging over such concepts as multiculturalism
and diversity. Such controversy within the arts community might have seemed
merely a sideshow to the profound inter-racial,-ethnic, and-class conflicts
that erupted then in Los Angles into ...
Publisher: JSTOR
Publication Date: Jan 1, 2001
Publication Name: Yearbook for traditional music
====
Dr. Colin Quigley is Course Director and Senior Lecturer in
Ethnomusicology at UL and Emeritus Professor UCLA Ethnomusicology, World
Arts and Cultures.. His broad disciplinary affiliations are to
ethnomusicology, ethnochoreology and folkloristics. His research interests
are in European and European-American traditions of music and dance. He has
published on both as found in Newfoundland, Canada. Close to the Floor
(1985) examined the traditional dancing of the province’s small fishing
communities, Music from the Heart (1995), the creative process of an
outstanding French-Newfoundland fiddler. He began work in east central
Europe following 1989 and curated the 1999 Smithsonian Institution Folklife
Festival 'Gateways to Romania' exhibit. While on a Fulbright senior
research fellowship he investigated the inter-ethnicity of dance and dance
music in Transylvania. Field recordings from this project are incorporated,
along with extensive annotation, in the Indiana University EVIA Digital
Archive (
www.eviada.org). Colin worked for two years in Budapest
observing its lively traditional and world music scene before moving to
Ireland in 2008. His work has appeared in journals including
Ethnomusicology; The Yearbook for Traditional Music; Acta Ethnographica
Hungarica; and Inbhear, the online journal for Irish music and Dance
produced at the irish World Academy (
www.inbhear.ie). He has been the
Chair of the Irish Music Study Group of the SEM, and General (founding)
Editor of 'Ethnomusicology Ireland' the journal of the Irish National
Committee of the ICTM (
www.ictm.ie). A fiddler and banjo player himself,
he offers master classes and workshops in the fiddling and dancing of
Newfoundland and the American South-East.l
====