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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 Early 1990s iThe early belly dance writings mark a shift from local ritual to transnational circulation. Sellers-Young argues that American “belly dance” is not simply raqs sharqi transplanted intact, but a transcultured form shaped by Orientalism, commercial entertainment, Arab American restaurants, women’s liberation, body culture, and new pedagogies. Her analysis becomes increasingly double-edged: belly dance may empower American women by giving bodily access to sensuality and self-expression, yet that empowerment often depends on an imagined Arab female body produced by Western fantasy.
This period introduces a lasting concern with authenticity as unstable. A supposedly traditional form may already be hybrid, staged, mediated, or commercially transformed. The question becomes not “is it authentic?” but “who is authorized to make it mean, under what historical conditions, and with what bodily effects?”
Continuity: dance remains social evidence.
Break: the object of analysis moves from ritual structure to mediated global image.
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