How to Make Dances in an Epidemic
Tracking Choreography in the Age of AIDS
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Wisconsin Press
Published:30th Sep '04
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
David Gere, who came of age as a dance critic at the height of the AIDS epidemic, offers the first book to examine the interplay of AIDS and choreography in the United States, specifically in relation to gay men. The time he writes about is one of extremes. A life-threatening medical syndrome is spreading, its transmission linked to sex. Blame is settling on gay men. What is possible in such a highly charged moment, when art and politics coincide? Gere expands the definition of choreography to analyze not only theatrical dances but also ACT-UP protests and the unfurling of the Names Project AIDS quilt. These exist on a continuum in which dance, protest, and wrenching emotional expression have become essentially indistinguishable. Gere offers a gripping portrait of gay male choreographers struggling to cope with AIDS and its meanings.
Anyone interested in dance or in gay culture or in art and politics should, as I did, find this a fascinating book, impossible to put down. - Sally Banes, editor of Reinventing Dance in the 1960s
- Commended for de La Torre Bueno Prize 2005
- Short-listed for Lambda Literary Awards (Drama/Theater) 2004
ISBN: 9780299200800
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 598g
352 pages