
Flexible Bodies Honors The Lives And Labor Of British South Asian Dancers And Celebrates Their Contributions To A Distinct And Dynamic Sector Of British Dance. Drawing On Expertise Gained From Over Seven Years Dancing In Britain, Author Anusha Kedhar Presents A Multifaceted Picture Of British South Asian Dance As Its Own Distinctive Genre. Analyzing Dance Works, Dance Films, Rehearsals, And Touring - Alongside Immigration Policy, Arts Funding Initiatives, And Global Economic Conditions - Flexible Bodies Traces Shifts In British South Asian Dance From 1990s Cool Britannia Multiculturalism To Fallout From The 2008 Global Financial Crisis And, More Recently, The Anti-immigration Rhetoric Leading Up To The Brexit Referendum In 2016. Kedhar Draws On Over A Decade Of Interviews And Conversations With Dancers In Britain As Well As In-depth Choreographic Analysis Of Major Dance Works To Reveal The Creative Ways In Which British South Asian Dancers Negotiate Neoliberal, Multicultural Dance Markets Through An Array Of Flexible Bodily Practices. Providing A New, Critical Dance Studies Lens Through Which To View The Precarious Economic, Racial, National, And Legal Positions Of South Asians In Britain, Flexible Bodies ultimately Argues For Centering Dance Labor In Studies Of Neoliberalism.
This book investigates how British South Asian dancers navigate the precarious intersections of neoliberal economic markets, immigration policy, and national identity. Anusha Kedhar, drawing on her extensive background as both a practitioner and scholar, utilizes over a decade of interviews and choreographic analysis to argue that the physical labor of these dancers is central to understanding broader shifts in British multiculturalism. By examining the period from the 1990s to the post-Brexit landscape, the author demonstrates how bodily flexibility serves as both a creative strategy and a response to systemic economic and racial pressures.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars in dance studies and sociology recognize this work as a significant contribution to the intersection of performance labor and political economy. Experts frequently highlight the author's ability to bridge the gap between artistic practice and critical theory, making it a valuable resource for those studying the precarity of minority artists in neoliberal markets.
Page Count:
320
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190840153
ISBN-13:
9780190840150
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