No works found
Try a broader search term or remove the current filters.
Explore Dr. Barbara Sellers-Young's works.
The early Sudanese work frames dance as a social and ritual structure. In the study of the Zande Pumbo, Sellers-Young argues that dance must be analyzed with its full event-context: kinship labor, mourning, leadership, music, spatial arrangement, gender relations, food, alcohol, and social participation. This is her first major methodological principle. The Pumbo’s changing form registers colonial disruption, war, altered authority, shifting gender relations, and changing beliefs about witchcraft. Dance is both expressive and diagnostic.
The zar work extends this view to possession ritual. Here performance transforms private female crisis into public, theatrical, communal action. Sellers-Young draws on social drama and the ritual/theatre continuum to show that healing, role-playing, trance, sacrifice, music, dance, and feasting form a structured process of redress. Her early view is therefore anthropological and functional, but already attentive to embodiment, gender, and temporary solidarity.
Continuity: dance is never isolated movement.
New emphasis: performance as a mechanism for producing concord, recognition, and temporary social reordering.
Open era page 2005-2010 iThis period broadens and complicates the earlier positions. In belly dance studies, Sellers-Young sharpens the critique of appropriation, commercialization, and the imagined Arab body. She traces belly dance from the Chicago World’s Fair and “Little Egypt” through Arab American nightlife, second-wave feminism, goddess spirituality, and branded spectacle. Enjoyment is not denied, but it is placed inside unequal histories of representation.
In “Dance, Mimesis and the Conscious Body,” she identifies different pedagogical regimes: optical, somatic, and mediated. Mirror-based training produces self-objectification and visual abstraction; direct somatic apprenticeship produces incorporation into lineage and tradition; screen-based learning produces a more autonomous but more image-mediated learner. This is one of her clearest statements that pedagogy produces kinds of consciousness.
Her work on ethnographic perspective marks a decisive methodological turn. Reflexivity must include not only social identity but sensory structure, neurological pattern, and movement history. She names the genetic/structural, imaginal/social, and performance selves. This framework later becomes central to her somatic autoethnography.
The contemplation and neuroplasticity writings connect performance training to broader academic reform. Contemplative practice is framed as a third way of knowing, complementary to rational analysis and empirical observation. Neuroscience supplies a vocabulary for attention, plasticity, habit, and embodied change, though the underlying practical insight comes from performance and somatics.
Continuity: technique forms subjectivity.
Expansion: the performance studio becomes a model for higher education.
Open era page 2022-2024 iThe sustainability work is a major widening of scale. Sellers-Young now asks how artists activate ecological and cultural sustainability. Oregon becomes the case: not untouched Eden, but a conflicted landscape shaped by Indigenous presence, settlement, extraction, planning, wildfire, drought, tourism, and local memory.
Her concept of sustainability includes environment, culture, memory, social relation, economic survival, and community identity. Art matters because it trains perception and relation. Lavadour makes geology and Indigenous place-memory felt; Noack turns landscape into a co-performer through listening; Pozzi makes plastic waste materially and emotionally legible; murals preserve layered local histories; community performance creates civic dialogue.
The Yasmina Ramzy work applies earlier belly dance concerns to a multicultural urban institution. Arabesque in Toronto is neither simple preservation nor generic fusion. It is a local/global/local formation that stages Middle Eastern dance for a diaspora and multicultural public, using tarab, ensemble choreography, Egyptian musical centrality, and spiritual reinterpretation to counter reductive Orientalist images.
Continuity: art is embodied knowledge and social world-making.
Expansion: place becomes not background but collaborator.
Open era pageTry a broader search term or remove the current filters.