La Nijinska
Choreographer of the Modern
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc
Published:7th Jul '22
Should be back in stock very soon
This biography explores the life of Bronislava Nijinska, a significant yet overshadowed figure in ballet. It highlights her contributions to neoclassicism, the challenges she faced as a female choreographer, and her influential collaborations.
La Nijinska is the first comprehensive biography of Bronislava Nijinska, a pivotal figure in twentieth-century ballet and the premier female choreographer of her time. This work not only highlights her significant contributions to the art form but also addresses the broader historical context of ballet, illuminating the impact of her innovative approach amidst the challenges faced by women in the industry. Despite being overshadowed by her famous brother, Vaslav Nijinsky, Nijinska enjoyed a longer and more prolific career, shaping the neoclassical movement and leaving an indelible mark on modern ballet.
The biography explores Nijinska's artistic journey, particularly her response to the Russian Revolution, which influenced her most acclaimed work, Les Noces. Through her choreography, she challenged traditional gender roles and expanded the technical and artistic capabilities of the ballerina, often probing the complexities of gender dynamics within her performances. Her collaborations with prominent artists of the era, including Stravinsky and Diaghilev, further solidified her reputation as a visionary in the ballet world.
In addition to her choreographic achievements, Nijinska was an accomplished dancer with a remarkable technique and stage presence. Her memoirs and writings on movement provide valuable insights into her creative process and the artistic climate of her time. La Nijinska not only recovers the legacy of a remarkable artist but also sheds light on the persistent sexism that women choreographers continue to face, making it a vital read for anyone interested in the evolution of ballet and the role of women in the arts.
La Nijinska reveals why some choreographers become canonized and illustrates the process's inseparability from external funding, gender, race, class, and ethnicity. * MARA MANDRADJIEFF, DANCE CHRONICLE *
Esteemed dance historian Lynn Garafola meticulously chronicles this life -- in the first full Nijinska biography ever * Mindy Aloff, Wendy Perron *
La Nijinska realigns dance history and does long-overdue justice to one of the twentieth century's great women artists. * Alastair Macauley, The New York Review of Books *
In a year of great books about dance, this biography of Vaslav Nijinskys sister, Bronislava, stands out... Sensational and enraging. * Sarah Crompton and Robbie Millen, 7 best film and theatre books of 2022, Sunday Times *
Blessedly free of academic dance jargon... Garafola's writing style is clear, unfussy, and easy to digest. She presents us, however, with the life of an immensely talented choreographer whose artistic ambition remained thwarted and unfulfilled. It's a sad story but one I urge you to discover for yourself. * Jonathan Gray *
... an engrossing book, which gives full weight to an extraordinary life... It is the art that is the ultimate subject of Garafolas book, and she does a triumphant job of reasserting its importance and recreating its impact. So few of Nijinskas works survive that is good to be reminded of just how significant many were when they were first seen, and how wide her influence was on succeeding generations... * Sarah Crompton, The Spectator *
Lynn Garafola, doyenne of ballet historians, has produced a scrupulously researched biography of a remarkable woman... Garafola's biography of this brave and complex woman is as judicious as it is sensitive. I recently completed a modest book covering some of the same field. I only wish I had been able to incorporate her meticulous scholarship before it went to press. * Rupert Christiansen, Literary Review *
... serious and thoroughly researched study of ballet's leading female choreographer... [an] excellent and thoughtful book. * Gillian Spickernell, The Lady *
fascinating, and very well researched * Avatâra Ayuso, ONE *
It's gratifying when a biographer and her subject are as perfectly matches as these two are. Everything in Lynn Garafola's prior life - her authorship of a major work on Serge Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, her investigations into other ballet and modern dance companies, her years of teaching in Barnard's eminent dance department - prepared her to accomplish this challenging task. And for Bronislava Nijinska, the long-neglected sister of Vaslav Nijinsky, it's nothing short of a resuscitation. Left out of the ballet history in which she actively participated ... she now has been brought to life by this first-ever biography. * Wendy Lesser, New York Times *
Finally the biography she deserves. * Dance International *
Nijinska could not have hoped for a more sympathetic and conscientious biographer than Garafola.... She understands the physical, educational, visual, dramatic, political, interpersonal, and financial aspects of the dance industry from the inside out. * Harlow Robinson, Los Angeles Review of Books *
[Nijinska's] life after 1924 is known only in sketchy form, though Garafola does a tremendous job of resurrecting it. * Marcia Siegel, Hudson Review *
A biography ... told in rich, fascinating detail. * Jennifer Wilson, The Nation *
Garafola documents the ways in which a misogynistic establishment undermined Nijinska's achievements and argues that, despite this, her ideas about the relationship between movement and music helped shape the modern art of ballet. * The New Yorker *
La Nijinska is a wonderful read; a window into the life of a woman who, for decades, was the world's leading female choreographer.... A big but gratifying read. Garafola provides a previously sketchy, monochrome account of history in color for the first time. * Seeing Dance *
A fascinating account of life and work of the great and enigmatic Bronislava Nijinska, who left us a couple of ballets of genius and many unanswered questions. Nijinska, the most influential woman choreographer in classical ballet, was an inspiration for many generations of dance makers, and yet many aspects of her life remained poorly researched and unknown, partly because her memoirs only covered the early years. I was especially interested to read about Nijinska's choreographic debuts in Kiyv, Ukraine, and the second part of her life in California. The interviews of the dancers who worked with her last are priceless. Congratulations to Lynn Garafola. This book, thoroughly researched, full of unknown facts and inspiring details, is a book we were all waiting for. * Alexei Ratmansky, Choreographer, American Ballet Theatre *
In this inspirational first biography of Bronislava Nijinska, based on global research, Lynn Garafola has successfully drawn the great choreographer from the shadow of her famous brother. She reveals a complex woman who experienced more than her fair share of tragedies and was constantly betrayed by men, while creating experimental ballets and inspiring successive generations of performers, directors and choreographers. * Jane Pritchard, Curator of Dance, Victoria and Albert Museum, London *
This book is an astonishing achievement. Nijinska, sister of tragic dancer-genius Nijinsky, emerges here as a larger-than-life heroine, an Amazon endowed with visionary talent, yet blocked at every turn by forces arrayed against an ambitious woman. It's an epic tale, based on impeccable sources, narrated with rare lucidity, set against a three-continent-wide panorama of European, American and émigré-Russian artists and impresarios, all chasing after this magical quality we now call Modernity. * Elizabeth Kendall, author of Balanchine and the Lost Muse: Revolution and the Making of a Choreographer *
ISBN: 9780197603901
Dimensions: 165mm x 229mm x 58mm
Weight: 1111g
696 pages