2014
Paul A. Scolieri
- Associate Professor
- Barnard College
Abstract
Ted Shawn (1891–1972), "The Father of American Dance," was a pioneer of twentieth-century American performance. Based on extensive archival research, the project examines Shawn's work in relation to emerging modern ideas about gender, sexuality, race, and ethnicity, especially as they converged in the discourses of eugenics, social evolution, and sexology. By illuminating Shawn's relationships to artists and scientists who were leading a radical movement to depathologize homosexuality (such as Havelock Ellis and Alfred Kinsey), the study exposes the critical and material intersections between the histories of dance and gay culture in the United States.