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A visual history of social dance in 25 moves

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    This is the bop.
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    The bop is a type of social dance.
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    Dance is a language
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    and social dance is an expression
    that emerges from a community.
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    The social dance isn't choreographed
    by any one person.
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    It can't be traced to any one moment.
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    Each dance has steps
    that everyone can agree on
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    but it's about the individual
    and their creative identity.
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    Because of that,
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    social dances bubble up,
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    they change
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    and they spread like wildfire.
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    They are as old as our remembered history.
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    In African-American social dances,
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    we see over 200 years
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    of how African and African-American
    traditions influenced our history.
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    The present always contains the past,
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    and the past shapes who we are
    and who we will be.
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    (Clapping)
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    The Juba dance was born from enslaved
    African's experience on the plantation,
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    brought to the Americas,
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    stripped of a common spoken language,
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    this dance was a way for enslaved Africans
    to remember where they're from.
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    It may have looked something like this.
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    Slapping thighs,
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    shuffling feet
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    and patting hands:
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    this was how they got around
    the slave owners' ban on drumming.
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    Improvising complex rhythms,
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    just like ancestors did
    with drums in Haiti,
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    or in the Yoruba communities
    of West Africa.
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    It was about keeping
    cultural traditions alive
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    and retaining a sense of inner
    freedom under captivity.
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    It was the same subversive spirit
    that created this dance:
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    The Cakewalk.
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    A dance that parodied the mannerisms
    of Southern high society.
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    A way for enslaved
    to [...] at the masters.
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    The crazy thing about this dance
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    is that the Cakewalk
    was performed for the masters,
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    who never suspected
    they were being make fun of.
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    Now you might recognize this one.
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    1920s --
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    The Charleston.
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    The Charleston was all about
    improvisation and musicality,
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    making its way into Lindy Hop,
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    Swing dancing
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    and even the Kid n Play,
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    originally called the Funky Charleston.
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    Started by a tight-knit Black community
    near Charleston, South Carolina,
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    the Charleston permeated dance halls
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    where young women suddenly had
    the freedom to kick their heels
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    and move their legs.
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    Now social dance is about
    community and connection,
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    it you knew the steps
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    it meant you belonged to a group.
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    But what if it becomes a worldwide craze?
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    Enter the Twist.
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    It's no surprise that the Twist can be
    traced back to the 19th century,
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    brought to America from
    the Congo during slavery.
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    But in the late 50s,
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    right before the Civil RIghts Movement,
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    the twist is popularized
    by Chubby Checker and Dick Clark.
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    Suddenly, everybody's doing the Twist:
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    white teenagers,
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    kids in Latin America,
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    making its way into songs and movies.
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    Through social dance,
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    the boundaries between groups
    become blurred.
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    The story continues in the 1980s and 90s.
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    Along with the emergence of Hip-Hop,
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    African American social dance
    took on even more visibility,
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    borrowing from its long past,
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    shaping culture and being shaped by it.
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    Today these dances continue
    to evolve, grow and spread.
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    Why do we dance?
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    To move.
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    To let loose.
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    To express.
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    Why do we dance together?
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    To heal,
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    to remember,
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    to say, "We speak a common language,
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    we exist and we are free."
Title:
A visual history of social dance in 25 moves
Speaker:
Camille A. Brown
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
04:36

English subtitles

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