Article

Dancing Modernism: Ritual, Ecstasy and the Female Body

Details

Citation

Anderson E (2008) Dancing Modernism: Ritual, Ecstasy and the Female Body. Literature and Theology, 22 (3), pp. 354-67. https://doi.org/10.1093/litthe/frn024

Abstract
This article considers the intersection of ritual, dance and embodiment inthe work of Isadora Duncan and H.D. I argue that dance lends itself toexplorations of gender and embodiment in modernism and that thesignificance of the body is especially problematic for the female dancer.Modernist writing about dance tends to erase the body of the dancer,presenting her as a disembodied ideal. However, analysis of IsadoraDuncan's work reveals a contradictory movement towards an understandingof dance as a bodily grounded art form. The article then traces the role ofritual and the Dionysian ecstasy in their work and their differing treatmentsof embodiment and sexuality. Jane Harrison's work on the connectionbetween art and ritual illuminates the connection between the moving bodyand ecstatic ritual for H.D. and Duncan. In ‘The Dancer', H.D. explores aconnection between the desiring body, creativity and spirituality that formsthe centre of her poetics. She is preoccupied with dance as a fusion betweeneroticism and ritual. For H.D., art and spirituality are rooted in the eroticbody. Finally, I suggest that the nexus of ritual, ecstasy and embodimentproves to be a creative source for a number of other modernist writers.

Keywords
Isadora Duncan; H.D.; Hilda Doolittle; body; modern dance; ritual; embodiment; ecstasy; Jane Harrison

Journal
Literature and Theology: Volume 22, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2008
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/18168
PublisherOxford University Press
ISSN0269-1205