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The Prehistory of Samba: Carnival Dancing in Rio de Janeiro, 1840–1917
75
Citations
6
References
1996
Year
Latin American StudyPre-lenten Carnival17Th Century DancePopular CultureCultural Studies18Th Century DanceAbstract RioModified ViewCultural HistoryModern DanceArt HistoryDanceNational StudiesCultural PracticeArt PolicyMigration And ArtContemporary DanceTraditional DanceDance HistoryArts
Abstract Rio's pre-Lenten carnival and its Afro-Brazilian dance, samba, have been symbols of Brazilian identity since the 1930s. This article explores the choreographical antecedents of samba, before the crystallisation of the modern dance genre with that name, highlighting the importance of earlier social dances in the evolution of the twentieth-century symbol. It traces the development of carnival dancing in Rio de Janeiro from the time when few danced, through the long reign of the polka, to the emergence of generalised carnival street dancing around 1889. A modified view of the roots of samba has interesting implications for on-going debates on the social meaning of Brazilian carnival.
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