120 research outputs found

    Ballroom in the Big Peach: The History of Organized Ballroom Dancing in Atlanta, 1950-1984

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    This dissertation argues that in the years 1950 to 1984, ballroom dance studios in Atlanta were spaces where participants forged identities. Atlanta is used as a case study to interrogate how ballroom dance studios functioned, and to demonstrate the lived experience of those who worked in the industry. Mirroring the rise of consumerism, and conspicuous consumption, in post-World War II United States, ballroom dance studios in the fifties through eighties saw themselves as, first and foremost, business entities. Ballroom studios were spaces where wealthy clients could reinforce their elite status in society, by spending large amounts of money on dancing, and receiving personal attention from qualified instructors, and personnel. Simultaneously, clients and teachers forged close personal bonds which created a welcoming environment that encouraged clients to spend more time, and money, in the studio. The familyness that developed within studios created a client/teacher relationship that was intimate, but based on a monetary exchange. The familial relationships cultivated within the studio setting were not limited to teacher-client relationships, but also grew between teachers within the studio. Using the words of teachers in Atlanta who taught in the period under investigation, this project shines a spotlight on a group of individuals who have been a presence in the economy, and society, but have remained under-examined by academics. Contrary to the image of men being dominant on the dance floor, the experience of Atlanta teachers shows that women were powerful actors in the business, and that women ironically taught men how to be masculine on the dance floor. “Ballroom in the Big Peach” also reveals that, despite the dominance of white clients in ballroom studios in the twenty-first century, there were black ballroom studios in Atlanta in the 1950s and 1960s, and they appear to have functioned much like white studios, catering to black elites. They were also spaces where black women asserted their expertise and business knowledge. By 1984 the ballroom dance industry had become dominated by competitive dancing, leading to a renaming of the national body, and a change in focus of most studios to competitive dancing, rather than social dancing

    Easterner, Volume 32, No. 1, September 25, 1980

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    This issue of the Easterner contains articles about student Mark Tearnan who was run over near Louise Anderson Hall, an agreement with Gonzaga University over the amount of business courses to offer on the Spokane campus, the planetarium and its director Eileen Starr, a theft at the photo lab, and the dedication of Reese Court.https://dc.ewu.edu/student_newspapers/2041/thumbnail.jp

    The Murray Ledger and Times, November 11, 1989

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    Daily Eastern News: September 13, 1967

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    https://thekeep.eiu.edu/den_1967_sep/1001/thumbnail.jp

    May 1, 1981

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    The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia

    American Square Dance Vol. 31, No. 8 (Aug. 1976)

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    Monthly square dance magazine that began publication in 1945

    October 1, 1990

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    The Breeze is the student newspaper of James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia

    Square dancing: official magazine of the Sets in Order American Square Dance Society.

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    Published monthly for and by Square Dancers and for the general enjoyment of all

    The Advocate, October 24, 2002

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    https://red.mnstate.edu/advocate/1008/thumbnail.jp
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