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Articles

‘Ballet it’s too whitey’: discursive hierarchies of high school dance spaces and the constitution of embodied feminine subjectivities

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Pages 31-46 | Published online: 03 Dec 2008
 

Abstract

This article investigates (i) how the structuring practices and meanings associated with dance classes at an inner‐city American high school operated as institutional spaces (re)producing ‘dividing practices’ that supported racial and classed hierarchies; (ii) how these racist structures were created and maintained relative to dominant notions of embodiment, ‘race’, social class, femininity, and dance; and (iii) the way these dominant practices and hierarchies were managed by two ‘black’ young women at the high school in order to construct particular modes of self‐governance. The analysis suggests that educators be attuned to the role that spaces play in creating particular types of ‘docile’ bodies and the strategies enacted by young people to create alternative embodied practices and subjectivities.

Notes

1. The use of ‘black’, ‘white’, ‘race’, ‘racist’, and ‘racial’ surrounded by quote marks throughout this article suggests that these are social, political, and historical constructs based around the categorisation of skin colour and thus they have no ‘real’ or ‘objective’ meaning. We deploy the terms ‘ethnic’ and ‘African‐American’ within quote marks to disrupt how this concept has been defined and deployed in essentialist, homogenising, and assimilationist ways.

2. Kwanzaa is a non‐denominational ‘African‐American’ celebration incorporating African culture and ancestry.

3. African dance classes are no longer offered in the afternoon. At the time of writing this article, the only dance traditions taught were jazz, tap, modern and ballet.

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