Jennifer Atkins is graduate program director at Florida State University's School of Dance.
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Description
"This is an important study of gender, race, and space in the New Orleans Mardi Gras tradition as it shows how the roots of white privilege have become entangled in the city's enactments of pleasure in ways that continue to persist. Atkins demonstrates that symbols associated with leisure can be manipulated to rehearse and assert dominance. The added benefit of this book is its conceptual framework, which offers a method through which other dance traditions can be analyzed for their social content and for how they reinscribe the status quo; and also for the ways dances evolve as transgressive responses to oppressive normative conditions. Students of dance, Southern history, gender, and ethnic studies will find this work useful for how social ideals and political currents emerge as embodied discourses." - Kim Vaz-Deville, author of The "Baby Dolls": Breaking the Race and Gender Barriers of the New Orleans Mardi Gras Tradition

