An Introduction to America’s Music

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

48 PART 1 | FROM COLONIZATION THROUGH THE CIVIL WAR


DANCING AND DANCE MUSIC


For centuries, dance has been a lightning rod for American public opinion. Two
controversial issues have repeatedly surfaced since the 1600s: dance’s erotic
dimension and efforts to keep it under control, and dance’s connection with
social class. Even though dance is being discussed here as a secular activity, it has
long been a matter for debate in American religious life. Moreover, like clothing
and manners, dancing has often served as a marker of social trends and fashion.
Before the Civil War, most American social dances came from Europe. More
recent ly, t hey have or ig i nated ch iefl y on this side of the Atlantic, with new dances
tending to be physically freer than the ones they replace (ragtime, discussed in
chapter 10, is a prime example). In the story of popular dance’s development
in America, Puritanism has often been assigned a villain’s role. Dances once
denounced as instruments of the devil now appear quite proper, making objec-
tions raised against them seem quaint. Important issues were at stake, however,
in the debates that dance has inspired.
The lack of common ground between social dance and the Puritan imagina-
tion may be traced to the belief that spirit and fl esh are contrary forces locked in
a perpetual struggle. Devout Puritans saw themselves as sinners dependent on
the grace of God. Dance that celebrated the human body did so, they believed, at
the soul’s expense. Yet while mistrusting the spirit of dance, Puritans acknowl-
edged that it could be effective as a way to discipline the young. In a tract with
a title whose religious passion echoes through the ages—An Arrow against Profane
and Promiscuous Dancing; Drawn out of the Quiver of the Scriptures (Boston, 1684)—the
Reverend Increase Mather, father of Cotton, wrote that if “the Design of Danc-
ing is only to teach children good Behaviour and a decent Carriage,” then he
could approve it. To keep “uncleanness” (i.e., sexuality) at bay, however, Mather
recommends that girls and boys be taught separately, and by a pious teacher. The
one adult Mather refers to in this passage is the dancing master. It was hard for
Puritans to believe that grown men and women could dance together while still
honoring and glorifying God.
For non-Puritans, however, dance has not always been considered a secu-
lar activity. African religions brought to North America by slaves gave dance a
crucial role (see chapter 4). Many American Indian tribes have also relied on
music and movement together to establish contact with the spiritual realm.
Even within Anglo-American culture, the Shakers, a celibate sect founded in late
eighteenth-century England that endured in this country into the early twenty-
fi rst century, were known for their sacred dancing.
Most Anglicans considered dancing to be a secular activity but did not share
the Puritans’ disapproval of it. In 1714 King’s Chapel in Boston hired Edward
Enstone from London as its organist, anticipating that his work would include
dance instruction. There were also dancing masters in colonial Boston from the
1670s on, whatever the Puritans thought of them. At one end of the dance spec-
trum were skills taught formally by masters like Enstone that prepared people to
attend social functions such as balls. At the other was a casual, informal pastime
taking place at home and as part of festive occasions.
Dance manuals and musical sources reveal that Americans of the colonial era
performed both couple dances and country dances. Couple dances, including the
gavotte, the bourrée, and especially the minuet, were courtly affairs of French ori-
gin that called for precise, schooled movements. To perform such dances well was

Puritan attitudes
toward dancing

Anglican attitudes
toward dancing

dance types

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