Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-75dct Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-13T09:15:46.392Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Havelock Ellis's Essay “The Art of Dancing”: A Reconsideration

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  22 July 2014

Extract

Since its publication in 1923 Havelock Ellis's essay, “The Art of Dancing,” found in his book The Dance of Life (pp. 34-63), has had a special place in the hearts of dance lovers from all walks of dance life. In the past several years Ellis's essay has been reprinted in three anthologies: Dance, in the quarterly periodical Salmagundi (1976:5-22), edited by Martin Leonard Pops; The Dance Anthology (1980:238-254), edited by Cobbett Steinberg; and What Is Dance? (1983:478-496), edited by Roger Copeland and Marshall Cohen. Their collections, claim the anthologists, contain the best available writing on dance; thus, they include Ellis's essay. In their introductory remarks Steinberg as well as Copeland and Cohen emphasize Ellis's comprehensive view of dance. Both their books contain a section entitled “Dance and Society” where Ellis's essay is presented. Only Pops accurately identifies Ellis, along with most of the other authors in his collection, as an enthusiastic amateur.

Since its publication, ideas from Ellis's essay have been quoted by many writers on dance: critics Walter Terry in The Dance in America (1971), Walter Sorell in Dance Through the Ages (1967), John Martin in America Dancing (1936), and Carl Van Vechten in his essays “The Land of Joy” and “Spain and Music” (1974:135-167); educators Margaret H'Doubler in Dance: A Creative Art Experience (1940), Elizabeth Selden in A Dancer's Quest (1935), Roderyk Lange in The Nature of Dance: An Anthropological Perspective (1975), Frederick Rand Rogers in Dance: A Basic Educational Technique (1941), Richard Kraus in History of Dance in Art and Education (1969), and Sondra Fraleigh in Dance and the Lived Body: A Descriptive Aesthetic (1987); historian Selma Jeanne Cohen in Next Week Swan Lake (1982); and philosophers Theodore M. Greene in The Arts and Art Criticism (1940) and Francis Sparshott in Off the Ground: First Steps in a Philosophical Consideration of Dance (1988). Early modern dance pioneers Ruth St. Denis and Ted Shawn imply in their writings that, because Ellis once again identified dance as an art, his status and erudition validated their own ideas about the value of dance (Terry 1976:43). These artists and authors regard Ellis as an authority. To introduce this reconsideration of Ellis's ideas about dance, the ideas these authors select to quote or cite from Ellis's essay will be examined.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Congress on Research in Dance 1992

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Beaumont, Cyril W. (1963) A Bibliography of Dancing. (New York: Benjamin Blom).Google Scholar
Cohen, Selma Jeanne. (1982) Next Week Swan Lake. (Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press).Google Scholar
Collis, John Stewart. (1959) Havelock Ellis: Artist of Life, A Study of His Life and Work. (New York: William Sloane Associates).Google Scholar
Copeland, Roger and Cohen, Marshall. (1983) What Is Dance?: Readings in Theory and Criticism. (Oxford: Oxford University Press).Google Scholar
De Cahusac, Louis. (1754) La Danse ancienne et moderne. (La Haye: J. Neaulme).Google Scholar
Ellis, Havelock. (1923) The Dance of Life. (New York: Grosset and Dunlop).Google Scholar
Ellis, Havelock. (1912) “The Philosophy of Dancing,” The Atlantic Monthly, pp. 197207.Google Scholar
Ellis, Havelock. (1908) The Soul of Spain. (Boston: Houghton Mifflin).Google Scholar
Flitch, J. E. Crawford. (1912) Modern Dancing and Dancers. (Philadelphia: J.B. Lippincott Company).Google Scholar
Fraleigh, Sondra. (1987) Dance and the Lived Body: A Descriptive Aesthetic. (Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press).Google Scholar
Greene, Theodore M. (1940) The Arts and Art Criticism. (Princeton: Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Grosse, Ernst. (1897) The Beginnings of Art. (Freiberg: J. C. B. Mohr).Google Scholar
Grosskurth, Phyllis. (1980) Havelock Ellis, A Biography. (New York: Alfred Knopf).Google Scholar
Grove, Lilly. Dancing. (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1895).Google Scholar
H'Doubler, Margaret. (1940) Dance: A Creative Art Experience. (New York: F.S. Crofts and Co.).Google Scholar
Kirstein, Lincoln. (1969) Dance: A Short History of Classical Theatrical Dancing. (New York: Dance Horizons).Google Scholar
Kraus, Richard. (1969) History of the Dance in Art and Education. (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc.).Google Scholar
Laban, Rudolf. (1959) “The Aesthetic Approach to the Art of Dancing,” Laban Art of Movement Guild Magazine 23, p. 29.Google Scholar
Lange, Roderyk. (1975) The Nature of Dance, an Anthropo-logical Perspective. (London: MacDonald and Evans, Ltd.).Google Scholar
Livingstone, David. (1872) Missionary Travels and Re-searches in South Africa including a Sketch of Sixteen Years' Residence in the Interior of Africa etc. (New York: Harper and Brothers Pub.).Google Scholar
Martin, John. (1936) America Dancing: The Background and Personalities of the Modern Dance. (New York: Dodge Publishing Company).Google Scholar
Munro, Thomas. (1949) The Arts and Their Interrelation-ships. (New York: The Liberal Arts Press).Google Scholar
Pops, Martin L., editor. (1976) Dance. Salmagundi: no. 33-34.Google Scholar
Ridgeway, William, (1915) The Dramas and Dramatic Dances of Non-European Races in Special Reference to the Origin of Greek Tragedy. (London: Cambridge University Press).Google Scholar
Rogers, Frederick Rand. (1941) Dance: A Basic Educational Technique. (New York: The MacMillan Company).Google Scholar
St. Denis, Ruth. (1939) An Unfinished Life, An Autobiography. (New York: Harper and Brothers, Pub.).Google Scholar
St. Johnston, Reginald. (1906) A History of Dancing. (London: Simpkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co.).Google Scholar
Selden, Elizabeth. (1935) The Dancer's Quest. (Berkeley: University of California Press).Google Scholar
Shawn, Ted. (1946) Dance We Must. (London: Dennis Dobson Ltd.).Google Scholar
Shawn, Ted. (1926) The American Ballet. (New York: Henry Holt and Co.).Google Scholar
Sherman, Jane. (1979) The Drama of Denishawn Dance. (Middletown, Connecticut: Wesleyan University Press).Google Scholar
Sorrell, Walter. (1967) Dance Through the Ages. (New York: Grosset and Dunlop).Google Scholar
Sparshott, Francis. (1988) Off the Ground: First Steps in a Philosophical Consideration of the Dance. (Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press).Google Scholar
Steinberg, Cobbett, editor. (1980) The Dance Anthology. (New York: New American Library).Google Scholar
Terry, Walter. (1976) Ted Shawn: Father of American Dance. (New York: The Dial Press).Google Scholar
Terry, Walter. (1971) The Dance in America. (New York: Harper and Row Pub.).Google Scholar
Urlin, Ethel L. (1912) Dancing Ancient and Modern. (London: Simkin, Marshall, Hamilton, Kent and Co., Ltd.).Google Scholar
Van Vechten, Carl. (1974) The Dance Writings of Carl Van Vechten. Padgette, Paul, editor. (New York: Dance Horizons).Google Scholar
Vuillier, Gaston. (1898) A History of Dancing: From the Earliest Ages to our own Time. (London: William Heinemann).Google Scholar
Who's Who in Literature: The Literary Year Book. 1934 Edition. (Liverpool, England: The Literary Year Books Press, Ltd., 1934).Google Scholar
Youngerman, Suzanne. (1974) “Curt Sachs and His Heritage: A Critical Review of World History of the Dance with a Survey of Recent Studies That Perpetuate his Ideas.” CORD News, 1-2, pp. 619.Google Scholar