30.08.2013 Views

Creolizing Contradance in the Caribbean - Temple University

Creolizing Contradance in the Caribbean - Temple University

Creolizing Contradance in the Caribbean - Temple University

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

8 Peter Manuel<br />

figures, and, above all, its spirit of passion, expression, and “naturalness” that<br />

replaced <strong>the</strong> m<strong>in</strong>uet’s stiffness and artificiality and <strong>the</strong> stately ceremoniousness<br />

of <strong>the</strong> rigodón. The contradance itself had also spurned that courtly priss<strong>in</strong>ess,<br />

but its emphasis on collectively performed figures, often dictated by a<br />

caller, eventually came to be seen as artless calis<strong>the</strong>nics. Sachs quotes a commentator<br />

from around 1800: “Our figure dances without character and expression<br />

[are] <strong>the</strong> most artificial and ridiculous foot play. . . . The empty chang<strong>in</strong>g<br />

of <strong>the</strong> sets, <strong>the</strong> alternation of <strong>the</strong>se dead geometrical figures is noth<strong>in</strong>g but<br />

sheer mechanism. . . . [The true dance] must have soul, express passion, imitate<br />

nature” (1937: 429). Hence <strong>the</strong> revolutionary (and accord<strong>in</strong>gly controversial)<br />

waltz, which <strong>in</strong> a Viennese ballroom could be genteel and ref<strong>in</strong>ed <strong>in</strong> its<br />

way or <strong>in</strong> a petty-bourgeois dance party could be vigorous and sensual.<br />

The <strong>in</strong>dependent couple dance, <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> European form of <strong>the</strong> waltz, reflected<br />

triumphant bourgeois ideology not only <strong>in</strong> its cult of “naturalness” and expression<br />

but also <strong>in</strong> its unprecedented and exclusive celebration of <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividual<br />

and his or her consort, ra<strong>the</strong>r than <strong>the</strong> broader community. The fundamentally<br />

asocial character of <strong>the</strong> dance could be easily appreciated if one were<br />

to imag<strong>in</strong>e an eighteenth-century contradance, or a modern square dance, at<br />

which one couple, <strong>in</strong> blatant disregard of <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>rs, were to dance <strong>in</strong>timately<br />

by <strong>the</strong>mselves <strong>in</strong> a corner. Goe<strong>the</strong> wrote of how joyous it was to “hold <strong>the</strong> most<br />

adorable creature <strong>in</strong> one’s arms and fly around with her like <strong>the</strong> w<strong>in</strong>d, so that<br />

everyth<strong>in</strong>g around us fades away” (<strong>in</strong> Sachs 1937: 430). Of course, primary<br />

among <strong>the</strong> th<strong>in</strong>gs that faded away was <strong>the</strong> community—<strong>in</strong> this case, <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong><br />

form of <strong>the</strong> o<strong>the</strong>r dancers. In <strong>the</strong> contemporary terms of Karl Marx and Fredric<br />

Engels, community—<strong>in</strong> its traditional cohesive sense—was one of <strong>the</strong> th<strong>in</strong>gs<br />

that melted <strong>in</strong>to th<strong>in</strong> air with <strong>the</strong> full emancipation of <strong>the</strong> bourgeois worldview.<br />

Impersonal mass market<strong>in</strong>g of commodities replaced local village craftsmen<br />

and underm<strong>in</strong>ed traditional occupations with <strong>the</strong>ir networks of guilds and<br />

feudal bonds; <strong>the</strong> establishment of <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>dividual as <strong>the</strong> basic socioeconomic<br />

unit vitiated <strong>the</strong> traditional social fabric; and <strong>the</strong> advent of capital undid an<br />

entire social order of feudal hierarchies and reciprocal obligations: “All fixed,<br />

fast-frozen relations, with <strong>the</strong>ir tra<strong>in</strong> of ancient and venerable prejudices and<br />

op<strong>in</strong>ions, are swept away. . . . All that is solid melts <strong>in</strong>to air, all that is holy<br />

is profaned” ([1847] 1959: 10). The spirit of <strong>the</strong> <strong>in</strong>dependent couple dance<br />

reflected <strong>the</strong> same <strong>in</strong>dividualism that came to permeate <strong>the</strong> arts, <strong>in</strong>clud<strong>in</strong>g <strong>the</strong><br />

<strong>in</strong>trospective poetry of Wordsworth, <strong>the</strong> self-conscious subjectivity of impressionist<br />

pa<strong>in</strong>t<strong>in</strong>g, <strong>the</strong> nuanced character portrayals of contemporary novels, and<br />

even <strong>the</strong> closed, narrative form of <strong>the</strong> classical sonata, with its <strong>the</strong>matic melodies<br />

that, like fictional protagonists, wander afar and <strong>the</strong>n dramatically return<br />

home. Inseparable from <strong>the</strong>se phenomena was Romanticism, with its emphasis<br />

on “naturalness,” <strong>the</strong> purported nobility of <strong>the</strong> peasantry, and sentimental love.<br />

All <strong>the</strong>se developments were grounded not <strong>in</strong> some set of superstructural aes<strong>the</strong>tic<br />

co<strong>in</strong>cidences but <strong>in</strong> <strong>the</strong> triumph—at once destructive and liberat<strong>in</strong>g—

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!