Hostname: page-component-77c89778f8-7drxs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-07-16T21:52:09.774Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Matters of Tact: Writing History from the Inside Out

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2014

Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Extract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

Long before I became a committed academic, long before I was a college professor teaching dance history, long before terminal degrees and professional titles, I chanced upon an exhibition of early dance photographs at the Rodin Museum in Paris. I bought the small catalogue, and from time to time I would page through the striking black and white images searching for dancing inspiration. I always paused at a certain one of Loïe Fuller. There she is, radiant in the sunlight of Rodin's garden, chest open, arms spread like great wings, running full force towards the camera. It is an image of a strong, mature woman, one who exudes a joyful, yet earthy energy. A copy of this photograph taken in 1900 by Eugène Druet currently hangs above my desk.

With a nod to the meanings embedded in historical study, Walter Benjamin once wrote: “To dwell means to leave traces” (1999, 9). Indeed, traces are the material artifacts that constitute the stuff of historical inquiry, the bits and pieces of a life that scholars follow, gather up, and survey. The word itself suggests the actual imprint of a figure who has passed, the footprint, mark or impression of a person or event. These kinds of traces are omnipresent in the case of Loie Fuller. Some traces are more visible than others, some more easily located. But all traces—once noticed—draw us into another reality.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 2004

References

Works Cited

Ashead-Lansdale, Janet 1999 “The Concept of Intertextuality and Its Application in Dance Research” In Proceedings of the 22nd Annual Conference, Society of Dance History Scholars 109115Google Scholar
Benjamin, Walter 1999 The Arcades Project Cambridge, MAThe Belnap Press of Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Current, Richard and Marcia, Current 1997 Lote Fuller Goddess of Light BostonNortheastern University PressGoogle Scholar
Flitch, J E Crawford 1913 Modern Dancing and Dancers LondonGrant Richards, LTDGoogle Scholar
Foster, Susan 1995 “Choreographing History” In Choreographing History Edited by Foster, SusanBloomington Indiana University PressGoogle Scholar
Franko, Mark, and Annette, Richards, eds 2000 Acting on the Past Hanover, NHWesleyan University PressGoogle Scholar
Fuller, Loie n d “The World Asks the truth about Loie Fuller and the Queen of Romania” [unpublished manuscript] The Loie Fuller Collection Lincoln Center Dance Collection, New York Public Library, New YorkGoogle Scholar
Garelick, Rhonda K 1998 Rising Star Dandyism, Gender, and Performance in the Fin de Siecle PrincetonPrinceton University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lista, Giovanni 1994 Loie Fuller Danseuse de la Belle Époque ParisStock-Éditions d'art somogyGoogle Scholar
McCarren, Felicia 1998 Dance Pathologies Performance, Poetics, Medicine StanfordStanford University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Miller, Nancy 1995 “Rereading as a Woman The Body in Practice” In French Dressing, 4552New York and London Routledge PressGoogle Scholar
Nancy, Jean-Luc 1994 “Corpus” In Thinking Bodies Edited by MacConnell, Juliet Flower and Zakarin, Laura, 1731Stanford, CAStanford University PressGoogle Scholar