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This volume brings a critical lens to dance and culture within North East India. Dance for people of North East India, as elsewhere, is also a way of declaring, establishing, celebrating, and asserting humans' relationship with nature.
List of contents
Introduction
1. Glimpses of the dance world of North-East India
2. Sattriya dance: A narrative of its journey through the ages
3. Moving objects and thinking body: A dancer's narrative
4. Discovering Sannidhi/a confluence: A dance exchange between Assam and Aotearoa, New Zealand
5. Kherai's dance world: Promoting solidarity and tradition
6. The dance and the dancers: Tradition and innovation within the indigenous performances of the ritual dance of the Hudum Deo
7. Identity revivalism through folk dances amongst the tribal communities of Assam
8. Bihu performance of the Morans of Assam
9. Social media and the politics of dance
10. Gender and dance: "Gazing" at the Doudini and the female Sattriya and Bihuwoti dancers
11. Reflections on dance education workshops in Assam: Towards critical and creative thinking
12. Echoing the rhythm: Voices of school dance teachers
13. Dancers' voices
14. Dance through the performers' lens
15. Studio dance teachers' journeys
16. The performers of folk dances
About the author
Debarshi Prasad Nath is Head of the Department of Cultural Studies at Tezpur University, Assam, India. Debarshi was the Principal Investigator for a partnership programme with UNICEF India, working on the empowerment of adolescents using folklore as a medium of communication, focusing primarily on folk music and dance. Debarshi's wide-ranging academic areas of interest are evident in his critical contributions from Cultural Theory to Contemporary Cultural Practices. His wide-ranging interests are reflected in his publications, covering areas of translation, literature, folklore, films, societies, and cultures in transition.
Ralph Buck is an award-winning teacher and academic leader. He is on the International Editorial Boards of
Research in Dance Education (RIDE) and the
Journal of Dance Education (JODE). He has collaborated with UNESCO in raising the profile in arts education around the world. He initiated, advocated for, and planned UNESCO's International Arts Education Week. He is on the Council for the World Alliance for Arts Education. Ralph's research and publications focus upon dance teaching and learning and community dance.
Barbara Snook is a Professional Teaching Fellow and Senior Research Fellow at the University of Auckland where she engages in researching the use of arts integration in primary school classrooms. She is also currently serving as an adjunct Professor at Tezpur University in Assam. Barbara was the Caroline Plummer Fellow in Community Dance at the University of Otago in 2008. She is a successful author of dance textbooks widely used in Australia and New Zealand and was the recipient of an Osmotherly Award in 2007 for services toward the development of dance education in Queensland Australia. Barbara is currently researching the area of dance for older adults.
Summary
This volume brings a critical lens to dance and culture within North East India. Dance for people of North East India, as elsewhere, is also a way of declaring, establishing, celebrating, and asserting humans' relationship with nature.