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Title: HISTORY OF THE BELLY DANCE: IS IT TO ENTICE MEN OR A FEMALES RITE
OF PASSAGE? |
Authors: Daniel Otero, China
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Abstract: One of the most beautiful-classical forms of dance which has persisted since 220 B.C.E. (Before
the Common Era) came from the Egyptian culture with its traditional ‘bedlah’ (???? ( or suit. But
it grew from the off-spring of the Arab Empire (???????? ????????? ,632 - 1492) and then spread
towards India (History Bits, 2018). It has been said or noted that from this dance style evolved
the traditional patterns used by the Indian women with their saris, to the Romani (Gypsy) women
while dancing flamenco in the medieval period, and the later burlesque techniques which
flourished in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries. Belly dance didn’t only influence these
latter cultures, but it further influenced in the ways of dress and fashion for females. A dance
taken from humble origins and converted into something for the international spectrum to glorify
the body of women who wished to be in contact with Mother Earth/Nature. This dance wasn’t
only for a female’s rite of passage. It was modified through different times in history to be
danced in the courts of the Imperial Palaces across the Middle East. Through time, even used by
the infamous Mata Hari to spy on men and used to get information during World War I. Belly
dance grew and with time became part of the line-up of classical dances. Because it is one of the
oldest and most enjoyed worldwide. With this paper, I intend to demonstrate that belly dancing
isn’t only to entice. It is more than that, it can be adapted to a woman’s anatomy and give her
way into womanhood |
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