Yiddish Dance Symposium at NYU December 9

  The Center for Traditional Music and Dance and
  New York University's Department of Performance
  Studies present:

  The Yiddish Dance Research Symposium
  "Defining Yiddish Dance: Secular, Sacred, Borrowed
  and Transformed"

  Sunday, December 9th - 9:30AM - 5:30PM
  Edgar M. Bronfman Center
  New York University
  7 East 10th Street
  New York, NY 10003
  (between 5th Avenue and University Place).

  Admission: $10 general public, $5 students/seniors

  Scholars wishing to register should RSVP to Center
  for Traditional Music and Dance's
   Pete Rushefsky, 212-571-1555 ext. 36,
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

  A special session focused on strategies for
  revitalizing the Yiddish Dance tradition will
  be held on the morning of Monday, December 10th
  (call/email Pete Rushefsky for details).

  The Yiddish Dance Research Symposium is a historic
  first-ever gathering of
  leading researchers, teachers and practitioners of
  the Yiddish (Ashkenazic)
  Dance tradition along with scholars specializing in
  dance ethnography, Jewish
  culture and other Central and East European
  cultures. The goals of the Yiddish
  Dance Research Symposium are for researchers to
  share fieldwork, discuss
  research into the dance tradition and its place
  within Yiddish culture, and
  identify goals/strategies for future fieldwork and
  dissemination of educational
  resources.

  The Symposium co-Chairs are Michael Alpert and
  Walter Zev Feldman, Ph.D.
  Professor Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett of New York
  University's Department
  of Performance Studies is the Symposium's host and
  will moderate.

  Sessions: Sunday, December 9 - 9:30AM - 5:30PM

  1) Welcome from the co-Chairs and Moderator
  2) Defining Yiddish Dance - Contexts, Genres,
  Gestures
  3) Analysis of Film and Video Documents
  4) Connection of Dance and Music
  5) The Sher and Contra-Dance
  6) Interaction with Co-territorial Dance
  7) European Hasidic Dance
  Concluding Thoughts

  Monday December 10th: Special Session (place/time to
  be announced)
  1) Strategies for Field Research, Documentation and
  Dissemination
  2) Training Dance Leaders & Encouraging
  Participation

  For hundreds of years, Jews were part of a diverse
  tapestry of ethnic communities
  in Eastern and Central Europe. Dance, particularly
  during wedding festivities, was
  an important means of cultural expression and
  community cohesion for Jews living
  in cities and shtetlekh (villages) alike. Much of
  the dance repertoire of East
  European Jews was of a multi- cultural nature.
  Nevertheless, Jewish dance also
  featured a unique vocabulary of gestures and genres.
  A variety of factors caused
  most traditional Yiddish dance and its associated
  klezmer repertoire to fall
  almost completely out of practice by the 1960s.

  Participants at the typical American-Jewish
  celebration of today may move in a circle
  to the rhythm of the music but are at a loss as to
  the dance forms, steps and
  stylistic gestures of the tradition. While remnants
  of a limited number of dance
  forms and gestures are retained in Hasidic
  communities, today there are but a
  few elderly immigrant and second-generation Jews
  left who still perform, or can
  even recall traditional dance from either Europe or
  America.

  Despite significant success in the revival of
  traditional Jewish klezmer music over
  the past thirty years, the associated Yiddish Dance
  tradition has received less
  attention and is at alarming risk of being almost
  completely forgotten. It is only thanks
  to the work of a handful of dedicated individuals
  (mostly operating without
  institutional support) that any fieldwork and
  documentation of Yiddish Dance has
  been done over the past thirty years.

  Special thanks to Erik Bendix and Jill Gellerman for
  their work in helping to
  conceptualize the conference.

  Thanks also to Renata Celichowska, Adrienne Cooper,
  Lee Ellen Friedland,
  Jill Gellerman, Itzik Gottesman, Cindy Greenberg,
  Judith Brin Ingber,
   Haim Kaufman, Janet Leuchter, Hankus Netsky, Ethel
  Raim, Karen Sander,
  Jake Shulman- Ment, Fanchon Shur, Mark Slobin, Steve
  Weintraub, Adam Whiteman
  and Helen Winkler.

  Other Upcoming Yiddish Dance Events: Thursday
  November 1st and
  Thursday December 6th from 7PM - 10PM
  Tantshoyz (Yiddish Dance House) - Workshop/Dance
  Party at the
  JCC in Manhattan (76th and Amsterdam).
  Zev Feldman leads the dancing to live klezmer music.
  Dancers of all abilities
  welcome. $10/$8 for JCC and Workmen's Circle
  members.

  Support for the Yiddish Dance Project was provided
  to the Center for Traditional
  Music & Dance by the Forward Association, the
  National Endowment for the Arts
  Heritage and Preservation, the New York State
  Council on the Arts Folk Arts Program,
  a State agency, and the New York City Department of
  Cultural Affairs.

  Peter Rushefsky, Executive Director
  Center for Traditional Music and Dance


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