Author/Contributor(s): | Foster, Susan Leigh |
Publisher: | Indiana University Press |
Date: | 08/22/1998 |
Binding: | Paperback |
Condition: | NEW |
This work is a landmark in the field and belongs in all libraries serving undergraduate, graduate, and faculty researchers in dance. --Choice
Invents a new method for writing the history of performance: Foster has found an innovative way of appealing directly to the kinesthetic imagination of her readers, evoking the elusive styles of the pieces she reconstructs. --Joseph Roach
An impressive work of scholarship, this elegantly staged study . . . uses the concept of a culturally constructed, historically specific body to cut across disciplinary boundaries . . . --Library Journal
Foster examines the development of ballet, and conceptions of the dancing body, as ballet separated from opera and emerged as an autonomous art form during the turbulence of 18th-century French society and history.