English callers and dancers clearly have no trouble saying or understanding 
these terms.  If they were that awkward, they would long since have been 
replaced.  I think we see positions as roles purely from habit.  If I taught a 
roomful of kids who had never danced using no roles, would they think of having 
danced a role?


It's each leader's call how to teach ballroom hold.  I suggest getting becket, 
the noting which hand you are holding with your P, so you can remember to end 
holding it again.  Keep holding that hand as you face P.    Place those same 
hands on your partners scapula, the dancer using Rhd below, left hand user 
above.  The free indicator hands are then loosely connected.  Boom, ballroom 
hold.  You still use the loose hand to indicate which way to face after the 
swing and let go of them, opening up like a book, so you are again holding the 
connector hands as in the beginning.  

I'm wondering what kinds of groups are even contemplating using non gendered 
terms, or positional calling.  Experienced groups of dancers currently using 
'gents and ladies' seem unlikely to do so, and it would likely have little 
effect on the way people dance.  Most would continue dancing whatever role they 
usually did, and pretty soon, any newcomer could see at a glance that if male, 
one dances Jet, and if female, Ruby.  So we'd just end up with another pair of 
terms associated with traditional gender roles.  Positional calling prevents 
the reassociation of gender with a new term, but I bet the structure of the 
dance would be largely unchanged.
OTOH, if we are talking about groups which have always been gender free, or new 
groups which fully intend to be gender free, I believe there would be little 
resistance to using global terminology, and using corners as a position, not a 
person, is the ultimate neutral mode.  The assumption there is that all dancers 
are created equal, and it's a team sport, where each needs to understand the 
whole dance and their place in it.  
The topic has been broached, as I understand it, because we care about making 
the dance space, or some dance spaces, a safe place to not worry about gender 
identity, because some people are very sensitive/are exploring/have identified 
in a non traditional way.  If we are sincere in our wish to make them 
comfortable, that care does not end because it requires more effort to learn to 
understand and teach a particular way.  Inconvenient isn't relevant.  We are 
creative people.  If we wanted to, we could shorten those terms for prompting 
(firsts and seconds). We can train ourselves to deeply understand how the 
positions work and evolve cleaner, more efficient teaches.  The search, to my 
understanding, was for an optimal universal way of calling gender free contra.  
If we are ok with sub optimal, we could just keep bands and bares, or the 
occasional moon and stars, which have been used for decades.  I will use 
whatever any given community wants me to use.  If I were faced with offering an 
option to my home gender free group, I would do my best first to try to be a 
kick ass global terminology caller, before giving in to naming roles, because I 
truly believe that method is more neutral than any other.
Cheers,
Andrea

Sent from my iOnlypretendtomultitask

> On Jun 2, 2015, at 11:00 AM, Maia McCormick via Callers 
> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
> 
> I think Ron's point is that with this set of terms (i.e. 1st/2nd corner 
> refers to the person rather than the position), if we're in an improper 
> context, we've basically circled back around to labeling the roles, only 
> these role labels seem unideal because they have lots of syllables and sound 
> relatively similar. At the point at which we're talking about "first corner" 
> and "second corner", isn't it less of a mouthful, easier to understand, and 
> easier for experienced dancers to convert into terms they understand to have 
> a set of terms like jets[gems]/rubies or larks/ravens?
> 
>> On Tue, Jun 2, 2015 at 10:54 AM, Perry Shafran via Callers 
>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>> It's the person in that position at the start of the dance, and that 
>> designation stays with you throughout the dance.  If you switch throughout 
>> the dance, then your corner designation may change.  It also has meaning in 
>> dance terms, where larks/ravens etc are just made up names.  As a matter of 
>> fact I'm more likely to remember my corner designation than whether I am a 
>> lark or a raven.  
>> 
>> Perry
>> 
>> From: Ron Blechner <contra...@gmail.com>
>> To: Perry Shafran <ps...@yahoo.com> 
>> Cc: Caller's discussion list <call...@sharedweight.net>; Andrea Nettleton 
>> <twirly-g...@bellsouth.net> 
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2015 8:45 AM
>> 
>> Subject: Re: [Callers] Another approach to Gender Free calling
>> 
>> If you want to redefine "corner" as a person, not a position...
>> On Jun 2, 2015 10:41 AM, "Perry Shafran via Callers" 
>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>> 
>> 
>> After thinking about this I think I am starting to agree with Andrea in that 
>> corners (first & second) just might be the perfect term to use.  In ECD, 
>> where most dances are proper, the first corner is gent 1 and lady 2, because 
>> in proper dances there are different genders on the diagonal.  In an 
>> improper dance (most contra dances), there are same genders on the diagonal. 
>>  So therefore the ladies would be in the first corner positions (same 
>> positions as in a proper English dance), and the gents are the second 
>> corners.  In a swing, first corners end up on the right.  I think by 
>> thinking about it this way you could do any dance, easy to challenging, with 
>> the corner terminology in place.  Just substitute any incidence of "gents" 
>> in your choreography with "second corner" and "ladies" with "first corner".  
>> 
>> Perry
>> 
>> From: Andrea Nettleton via Callers <callers@lists.sharedweight.net>
>> To: Michael Fuerst <mjerryfue...@yahoo.com> 
>> Cc: "call...@sharedweight.net" <call...@sharedweight.net> 
>> Sent: Tuesday, June 2, 2015 2:31 AM
>> Subject: Re: [Callers] Another approach to Gender Free calling
>> 
>> Hey Michael,
>> I think you mean that those who began the dance as first corners, will 
>> always end swings on the right, just as they are standing relative to their 
>> partner in the hands four.  
>> 
>> The dance is obscure to the dancers only to the degree the caller is unable 
>> to elucidate it.  It may take effort for callers to learn to teach as 
>> effectively this way, but that doesn't make it less clear.  When I called to 
>> the SFQCD, ninety percent of the dancers were men.  Even with bands and bare 
>> arms, so as clear an indication of role as they could achieve, they 
>> struggled with who ends where after stuff.  What if I could have given them 
>> the tool of knowing their corners, and in addition, the clear instruction to 
>> note carefully which hand they held when standing next to their partner? 
>> That would always be their connector hand when standing as a couple after 
>> swings, chains, and R&L thrus. The twofold active attention might have 
>> served them far better than the arbitrary labels.  Understanding that the 
>> pattern of the dance depends on knowing your geography makes sense.  Adding 
>> into that the need to remember a label doesn't improve the odds the 
>> geography will stick, at least it didn't there. In my opinion, looking for a 
>> person is less reliable than knowing your place in the dance.  People mess 
>> up, but the place is always there.
>> 
>> AN
>> 
>> 
>> Sent from my iOnlypretendtomultitask
>> 
>> 
>> 
>>> On Jun 2, 2015, at 4:05 AM, Michael Fuerst via Callers 
>>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Consider this dance
>>> 
>>> E.J.M.J.F. in Cincinnati        Duple Improper           Michael Fuerst     
>>>               March, 1991
>>> 
>>> A1      Balance and swing neighbor.
>>> 
>>> A2      Men allemande left 1 1/2 and swing partner.
>>> 
>>> B1      Long lines forward and back.  Women chain to neighbor.
>>> 
>>> B2      Women allemande right (4).
>>>         1/2 hey, neighbors start passing left shoulder, until
>>>            neighbors on the side they started the dance (8).
>>>         Neighbors pass left shoulders and turn sharply left  along set to 
>>> meet new
>>>            neighbors (4).
>>> Using this thread's suggestions, I think this becomes (as long as dancers 
>>> understand that those starting as second corners always end the swing on 
>>> the right)
>>> E.J.M.J.F. in Cincinnati        Duple Improper           Michael Fuerst     
>>>               March, 1991
>>> 
>>> A1      Balance and swing neighbor.
>>> 
>>> A2      First corners allemande left 1 1/2 and swing partner.
>>> 
>>> B1      Long lines forward and back.  Second corners chain to neighbor.
>>> 
>>> B2      Second corners allemande right (4).
>>>         1/2 hey, neighbors start passing left shoulder, until
>>>            neighbors on the side they started the dance (8).
>>>         Neighbors pass left shoulders and turn sharply left  along set to 
>>> meet new
>>>            neighbors (4)
>>> This makes the dance obscure to beginning and intermediate dancers.  Seems 
>>> best to have  names corresponding to the men's and women's roles, rather 
>>> than to have dancer's determine which corners they are at any point in the 
>>> dance.     
>>>  
>>> Michael Fuerst      802 N Broadway      Urbana IL 61801      217 239 5844
>>> 
>>> 
>>> 
>>> On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 2:26 AM, Andrea Nettleton via Callers 
>>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Actually Alan, because we dance improper most frequently, and becket almost 
>>> as much, I think I really don't want the labels applied to people so they 
>>> stick.  I'm just using the word corner the way Brooke and Chris use 
>>> diagonal.  In contra, we already have a use for the word diagonal, meaning 
>>> the next pair along across the set to the right or left.  The corner 
>>> reference we have is actually close to right, probably having grown out of 
>>> triple minor dances.  Right diagonal is first corner, Left diagonal is 
>>> second.  Make it fit in a hands four and you have pairs of corners along 
>>> opposite angles.  It's a place not a person.  Then I can write a dance 
>>> beginning with a second corner chain, and it will be those formerly 
>>> identified as gents, but will work totally fine.  If the dance were proper, 
>>> you could still have a second diagonals chain and it would be one of each 
>>> 'role'.  A direct transfer of the system to contra is not as useful as 
>>> adapting, IMHO.
>>> Andrea
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iOnlypretendtomultitask
>>> 
>>>> On Jun 2, 2015, at 3:07 AM, Winston, Alan P. <wins...@slac.stanford.edu> 
>>>> wrote:
>>>> 
>>> 
>>> I'm not Andrea but as someone who's appreciated the value of global calling 
>>> since Chris and Brooke proselytized our West Coast English caller self 
>>> improvement group about it in 2000 and who regularly uses it even in not 
>>> gender free English as well as for gender free English I think I can 
>>> answer.  
>>> 
>>> The Heather and Rose style (which they didn't invent but have published the 
>>> most in) is designed for proper longways.  Men's line is left file, ladies 
>>> line is right file.   In a square or Becket formation gents place are first 
>>> diagonals, ladies are second diagonals.  Corner is reserved for contra 
>>> corners and the immediate neighbor in a square. 
>>> 
>>> However, mainstream English gives us first corners (in a proper set, first 
>>> gent and second lady) and second corners (first lady and second gent).  If 
>>> you apply that to a typical improper contra, as Andrea was suggesting, the 
>>> ladies are on the first corners, the gents on the second corners. 
>>> 
>>> The answer to each of your questions about how she'd indicate what we now 
>>> do with gender is to substitute a corner reference.  First corners make a 
>>> wave in the middle of the set. They back up and second corners come in.  
>>> 
>>> 
>>> You'd have to decide whether the same positional reference applies to 
>>> becket, where it would be the gents, or have the corner assignments apply 
>>> before you becketize, which would be my preference. 
>>> 
>>> Does that clear it up ?
>>> 
>>> Alan
>>> 
>>> 
>>> Sent from my iPad
>>> 
>>> On Jun 1, 2015, at 9:12 AM, Ron Blechner via Callers 
>>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>> 
>>>> Andrea, how would you handle the following:
>>>> 1. Lines of one role/position to the center to a wavy line, as in Trip to 
>>>> Lambertville, et all?
>>>> 2. Indication of who walks forward / backs up in a gypsy star?
>>>> 3. Indication of who-leads-who, such as in Ramsay Chase, Pedal Pushers, 
>>>> Jurassic Redheads, etc.
>>>> 4. Indication of who is passing while calling a hey.
>>>> 5. Indication of who crosses, who turns in a box circulate?
>>>> 6. Indication any other role/position specific move that I haven't 
>>>> mentioned? Turn over right shoulder, as in Fairport Harbour? Rollaways?
>>>> None of these fall under the "most unusual figures" as you stated.
>>>> Ron
>>>> On Jun 1, 2015 11:59 AM, "Andrea Nettleton via Callers" 
>>>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>> In previous discussions here, on FB, and privately with organizers at 
>>>> Hampshire over the last two years, I have discussed the possible use of 
>>>> global terminology for gender free contra.  I would contend that if used, 
>>>> everyone would become more aware of the structure of dances.  Only the 
>>>> most unusual figures/sequences would be unable to be called.  The addition 
>>>> of first and second corner positions to the arsenal makes it possible for 
>>>> same role dancers to also be called upon to dance together without 
>>>> reference to gender.  Second corners chain, or first corners allemande L 1 
>>>> 1/2 for example.  It would have to be agreed that this refers to those 
>>>> standing in those positions at that moment.  In ECD we use first and 
>>>> second corners to refer to the people, first and second diagonals for the 
>>>> positions.  But since we use diagonal to refer to those across and over 
>>>> one set, this seems unhelpful.  Simply corner positions works better.  I'm 
>>>> glad some folks are trying it out at last.  I had hoped for an opportunity 
>>>> myself before now.
>>>> Cheers,
>>>> Andrea
>>>> 
>>>> Sent from my iOnlypretendtomultitask
>>>> 
>>>> On Jun 1, 2015, at 8:37 AM, Jim Hemphill via Callers 
>>>> <callers@lists.sharedweight.net> wrote:
>>>> 
>>>>> The recent discussions on this topic inspired me to try an experiment in 
>>>>> gender free calling.  Last night I called the contra dance in St. Louis 
>>>>> using gender free calling without telling anyone.    The experiment was a 
>>>>> great success.  I received lots of  positive feedback on the evenings 
>>>>> dance.  At the break and after the dance I made a point to ask several 
>>>>> dancers, some were callers as well, if they noticed anything different or 
>>>>> unusual about the dances or how I taught them.   One person noticed that 
>>>>> there were more  dances that included a swing in the center for couple 2 
>>>>> than usual.  No one I talked to noticed that the calls and teaching were 
>>>>> gender free.
>>>>>  
>>>>> It took some extra time to construct a fun, diverse 3 hour program, but 
>>>>> it is certainly possible.  Re-labeling the dancers is not the only way to 
>>>>> call gender free. 
>>>>>  
>>>>> If you are interested in the program I used or the larger collection of 
>>>>> gender free dances I chose the program from, send me an email,  
>>>>> arcadia...@gmail.com.
>>>>>  
>>>>> Thanks,
>>>>> Jim Hemphill
>>>>> _______________________________________________
>>>>> Callers mailing list
>>>>> Callers@lists.sharedweight.net
>>>>> http://lists.sharedweight.net/listinfo.cgi/callers-sharedweight.net
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