Grounding Practice
Dancing Haiti on Te Glise
Dasha A. Chapman(Author)
The University of Michigan Press
Will be published approx. on 18. January 2027
Book
Paperback/Softback
368 pages
978-0-472-05844-0 (ISBN)
Description
Grounding Practice: Dancing Haiti on Te Glise tracks the responsive physical techniques Haitian dancers devised for navigating precarity, making place, and igniting repair in the decade following the 2010 earthquake. Via the concept "grounding practice," which connotes the powerful community building and placemaking techniques these artists cultivated through the teaching and practice of Haitian folkloric dance, this interdisciplinary study illustrates how their embodied labor took on increasing relevance as vital reparative worldmaking amidst instability, or te glise-Haitian Creole for sliding land or slippery ground.
The dancers in Grounding Practice regenerate understandings of Haitian dance's potential for fomenting decolonial consciousness, meaningfully sustaining African-derived culture, birthing new social relations, activating the queer potentials of tradition, and ultimately making place. Through ethnography and dance writing, Dasha A. Chapman's attention to embodied knowledge illuminates how movement practice operates as sites of theorization-wherein not just subjectivity, but also concepts of sovereignty, relationality, and decolonial futurity, are articulated through the body. Paying homage to important forebears yet moving us beyond static narratives, this study brings our understanding of Haitian dance--and Haiti-through expansive landscapes into the contemporary.
The dancers in Grounding Practice regenerate understandings of Haitian dance's potential for fomenting decolonial consciousness, meaningfully sustaining African-derived culture, birthing new social relations, activating the queer potentials of tradition, and ultimately making place. Through ethnography and dance writing, Dasha A. Chapman's attention to embodied knowledge illuminates how movement practice operates as sites of theorization-wherein not just subjectivity, but also concepts of sovereignty, relationality, and decolonial futurity, are articulated through the body. Paying homage to important forebears yet moving us beyond static narratives, this study brings our understanding of Haitian dance--and Haiti-through expansive landscapes into the contemporary.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
United States
Illustrations
21 B&W illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-472-05844-0 (9780472058440)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Dasha A. Chapman is an interdisciplinary scholar, dance artist, educator, and serves on the Executive Board of the Haitian Studies Association.
Content
List of Figures
Acknowledgments
Notes on Language and Naming
Preface | Shifting Ground: From Kriz to Kase
Introduction
Grounding Practice
Dancing Haiti on Te Glise
Kase 1 | Haunted Grounds
Chapter 1
Ekspresyon and Fos
The Performativity of Practice and the Work of Folkloric Dance in Post-Earthquake Port-au-Prince
Kase 2 | Bulldozed Grounds
Chapter 2
Disiplin and Dyaspora
Tensions and Possibilities in Haitian Diasporic Dance Pedagogies
Kase 3 | Entangled Grounds
Chapter 3
Lessons in Placemaking
Grounding Practice and Feeling Fos with Lahens Louis
Kase 4 | Gendered Grounds
Chapter 4
Gran Lakou
Yonel Charles's M-Techniques for Building a Queer Place
Kase 5 | Sacred Grounds
Chapter 5
Lakou Ayiti
Practice and Placemaking in Jean Appolon's Saturday Classes
Epilogue | From Kase to Kafou: In Rupture, Many Crossroads
Postscript | 1825|2025: Confluences and Echoes
Glossary
Bibliography
Acknowledgments
Notes on Language and Naming
Preface | Shifting Ground: From Kriz to Kase
Introduction
Grounding Practice
Dancing Haiti on Te Glise
Kase 1 | Haunted Grounds
Chapter 1
Ekspresyon and Fos
The Performativity of Practice and the Work of Folkloric Dance in Post-Earthquake Port-au-Prince
Kase 2 | Bulldozed Grounds
Chapter 2
Disiplin and Dyaspora
Tensions and Possibilities in Haitian Diasporic Dance Pedagogies
Kase 3 | Entangled Grounds
Chapter 3
Lessons in Placemaking
Grounding Practice and Feeling Fos with Lahens Louis
Kase 4 | Gendered Grounds
Chapter 4
Gran Lakou
Yonel Charles's M-Techniques for Building a Queer Place
Kase 5 | Sacred Grounds
Chapter 5
Lakou Ayiti
Practice and Placemaking in Jean Appolon's Saturday Classes
Epilogue | From Kase to Kafou: In Rupture, Many Crossroads
Postscript | 1825|2025: Confluences and Echoes
Glossary
Bibliography