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Jookin': The Rise of Social Dance Formations in African-American Culture

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Katrina Hazzard-Gordon offers the first analysis of the development of the jook―an underground cultural institution created by the black working class―together with other dance arenas in African-American culture. Beginning with the effects of African slaves’ middle passage experience on their traditional dances, she traces the unique and virtually autonomous dance culture that developed in the rural South. Like the blues, these secular dance forms and institutions were brought north and urbanized by migrating blacks. In northern cities, some aspects of black dance became integrated into white culture and commercialized. Focusing on ten African-American dance arenas from the period of enslavement to the mid-twentieth century, this book explores the jooks, honky-tonks, rent parties, and after-hours joints as well as the licensed membership clubs, dance halls, cabarets, and the dances of the black elite. Jook houses emerged during the Reconstruction era and can be viewed as a cultural response to freedom. In the jook, Hazzard-Gordon explains, an immeasurable amount of core black culture including food, language, community fellowship, mate selection, music, and dance found a sanctuary of expression when no other secular institution flourished among the folk. The jook and its various derivative forms have provided both entertainment and an economic alternative (such as illegal lotteries and numbers) to people excluded from the dominant economy. Dances like the Charleston, shimmy, snake hips, funky butt, twist, and slow drag originated in the jooks; some can be traced back to Africa. Social dancing links black Americans to their African past more strongly than any other aspect of their culture. Citing the significance of dance in the African-American psyche, this study explores the establishments that nurtured ancestral as well as communal links for African-Americans, vividly describing black dances, formal rituals, such as debutante balls, and the influence of black dance on white culture.

248 pages, Paperback

First published May 17, 1990

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About the author

Katrina Hazzard-Gordon changed her name to Katrina Hazzard-Donald (https://www.goodreads.com/author/show...).

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Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews
1 review3 followers
March 6, 2011
A nice history of dancing in the African American community. Good references between social history and dance history, but I would have liked more examples of steps and mechanics of dances.
Admittedly, I have been exposed to movement concepts through old-timers and dance classes so I would have liked to have had what I learned compared to what people were doing at the time. What this book gave me was a fuller view of the social lives of the people and culture who were doing the partner dancing of the time.
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32 reviews33 followers
August 18, 2015
The subject is fascinating, and much of the primary source content, but the organization and writing felt dry and lifeless (especially compared to the type of dancing that served as the focus). I was most disappointed at the lack of sensitivity to the dance as movement. Very rarely did the author include descriptions of movements accompany their suggestive, but not necessarily defining, names for moves or steps such as funky butt, camel walks, snake hips, etc. Moreover, there's doubtless much to be gained by an insightful analysis of these movements, the spaces in which they occurred, and the social, political, and economic structures that led and followed the actual steps of the dancers.
122 reviews
May 2, 2023
Much of the book didn’t talk about dance, or about things related to dance. There wasn’t a lot of context either - I kept losing what topic and time period we were talking about. She spent half the book on one topic and then 1940s dance like Lindy Hop was barely 3 pages worth! It just wasn’t what I wanted when I picked up a book about black dance.
Profile Image for Bailey Olfert.
744 reviews21 followers
February 14, 2020
The focus is way more on the dance arenas than on the actual dancing (the title is slightly misleading; Jooks would be more accurate), but it is still some good history.
Profile Image for Jessica.
13 reviews
February 24, 2015
Had to read this for an Anthro African dance class where the author is my professor. The book is okay for the class and it went well because it taught me how dancing and slaves meshed together. If I was to see this book in a library I would not pick it up because it is not my type of read. It wasn't slow but you have to be interested in the genre and material that is being presented in the book. I did feel that the author jumped around a bit and it wasn't properly laid out.
516 reviews6 followers
January 25, 2015
This book places cultural developments in places, times, and demographics, while giving reasons for how those settings came about.

Dance movements and their development are not covered, while the placement of popular dances and their settings are included.
2 reviews
February 2, 2015
It's good, it's alright. It mostly just doesn't go into the depth that I was hoping it would. Given that I already know quite a bit about the subject I was really just hoping for more detail.
235 reviews4 followers
May 21, 2015
Strange organization, but really good research.
Displaying 1 - 8 of 8 reviews

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