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WINEROCK.COM

 About Me
 Publications
 Writings & Research
 Teaching & Performing
 Early Dance Texts
 Shakespearean Dance

 Renaissance Dance Links

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La Volta - Dolmetsch Historical Dance Society

Shakespearean Dance
  • Resource Guide
  • Primary Sources
  • Research Papers
  • Teaching, Performing & Choreography
  • Renaissance Dance Pictures
  • Renaissance Dance Links - Elizabethan history, the plays, where to study
historical dance, etc.

Definition:
It is difficult to settle on a term to denote the dancing in England from about
1550 to 1650. "Shakespearean dance," a term of my own coinage, refers
specifically to the dances in the plays and time of Shakespeare (1564-1616), and
more generally to dancing during the heydey of the English public theatres.
Historians refer to this period as "early modern", but in dance circles, "early
modern dance" refers to early twentieth-century dance. Similarly, dance
reconstructors refer to the style of dance in this period as "Renaissance
dance," but for historians, "Renaissance" is strongly associated with the
politics, scholarship, and artistic achievements of Italy in the fifteenth
century. Some literary scholars use the term "English Renaissance" in discussing
the time of Shakespeare.

Mission:
The goal of this website is to stimulate Shakespearean dance scholarship by
providing a multi-disciplinary array of relevant sources and resources. Although
many of Shakespeare's plays, including Romeo and Juliet, As You Like It, and
Macbeth, have dances in them, as do plays by Ben Jonson, John Marston, and their
contemporaries, dancing has almost entirely escaped the attention of dramatic
and literary scholars. Similarly, although dancing was a common activity at all
levels of early modern society, and played a role in key political, religious,
and cultural controversies in Tudor and Stuart England, few historians have
addressed it. Finally, there is a growing number of professional and amateur
historical dance reconstructors working on this period, but they tend to focus
on interpretting dance manual instructions rather than examining dance within
its historical context.

This site includes excerpts from and links to dramatic and literary texts, court
records, and other primary sources; bibliographies of secondary scholarship; and
links to performing groups and workshops, as well as summaries of my own
research in several of these areas. As the very concept of Shakespearean dance
is still in its infancy, I welcome all reactions, comments, and questions
regarding both content and presentation. You are invited to e-mail me at:

-- E. F. Winerock

 

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About Me | Publications | Writings & Research | Teaching & Performing | Early
Dance Texts | Shakespearean Dance |  Renaissance Dance Links

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Updated 2 January 2024