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Belly Dance post from another belly dance blog on livejournal

   Mon, December 3, 2007 - 5:39 AM
Hello all, found this article on a livejournal belly dance blog. I'm not sure how I feel about it... Any thoughts?

Swan


So You Think You Can (Belly) Dance?
by Racialicious special correspondent Fatemeh Fakhraie, originally published at Muslimah Media Watch

It’s time to set the record straight, everyone. So here it is: belly dancing is not a significant facet of Middle Eastern culture. It’s a dance, not a lifestyle (not according to most Middle Eastern people, anyway).

I’ve had one too many people ask me if I belly dance when they hear about my religion or ethnicity. Belly dancing is something that is present in some form of another in most Middle Eastern cultures, but is not really a part of our identity. And I assure you, nowhere in the Holy Qur’an does it say, “Thou shalt belly dance.” But because of Hollywood’s old Orientalist glamour, images of belly dancing have become almost synonymous with the Middle East.




I can’t help but get irritated when someone assumes that s/he and I automatically have something in common because s/he belly dances. The truth of a real-live Middle Eastern woman belly dancing seems to validate all those silly images that come into one’s head about spangly costumes and the Dance of the Seven Veils. Belly dancing has a host of sexualized and savage images attached to it, and if Middle Eastern/Muslim women confess to belly dancing (for exercise, as a career, for fun, or whatever), those images get attached to us, and we no longer have individual thoughts or lifestyles. We don’t take care of our parents or our children, we don’t have jobs or have opinions about health care reform, we just belly dance. Like it’s all we do, all day. This is why it’s insulting when someone thinks s/he knows what it’s like to be a Middle Eastern/Muslim woman because s/he’s taken a belly dancing class or read a book about it. The image of a Middle Eastern woman belly dancing seems to take away from our identity: it erases who we really are, our different nationalities and ethnicities, our emotions, our day-to-day existence.

Now, let me assure you: my problem isn’t with the dance itself. Belly dancing is a great way to connect with one’s sensuality, to exercise, and to appreciate the body that God gave you. Nor is my problem with non-Middle Eastern women (or men) belly dancing (or with Middle Eastern people dancing).
What bothers me is the adoption of a caricatured Middle Eastern identity through coin-bedazzled bras and Middle Eastern stage names like “Amina” or “Vashti.” If you’re a non-Middle Eastern performer, why give yourself a Middle Eastern stage name? What’s wrong with a name that reflects your own ethnicity or interests? Is it not “ethnic” or “exotic” enough? Besides, how would you feel if someone else used the name your parents gave you (that perhaps also belonged to your grandmother or aunt) as a stage name for an act that most people in your culture consider shameful if done publicly? (Cultural lesson: in most parts of the Middle East, belly dancing is often a cover for illicit activities.)

Similarly, dance troupe names like “Desert Queens” or “Daughters of Scheherazade” serve the same exoticizing purpose when these troupes are full of non-Middle Eastern women set in a non-Middle Eastern setting (like Austin, Texas, for example, which hosted a Belly Dancing Convention last July).

I take offense at the presentation of Middle Eastern “culture” through things like transparent veils, coin necklaces, and henna tattoos because reducing the Middle Eastern experience to some jingly coins and a scimitar takes the humanity right out of us. Elements of Middle Eastern/Muslim stereotypes are irreparably attached to the use of swords, snakes, and veils. These props serve to reinforce the idea of Muslim/Middle Eastern women as dangerous, sexually arousing, sexually submissive, and just plain different from women in the West.

Performers (Middle Eastern or non-Middle Eastern) highlight these images when they balance swords on their heads and give themselves henna tattoos. The inclusion of these props is often used to authenticate a Middle Eastern experience, making the performance or venue more like the “Mysterious Orient,” in which Middle Eastern women are acquiescing sexual props and Middle Eastern men are brutal and dangerous.

Why is this acceptable? These practices (other than henna for holidays and weddings) aren’t even Middle Eastern: Egyptian performers borrowed the ideas for these spangly suits from Hollywood in the early twentieth century. And no Middle Easterner just walks around all day with a sword perched atop her head. Belly dancing doesn’t even traditionally show off the stomach: a scarf is tied around one’s hips (over regular, concealing clothing) to emphasize the movements. So how did we get to sparkly bras and coin jewelry?!

Because sex sells! Early colonial performers knew what their (often Western or male) audiences wanted to see: sexuality. A pretty girl dancing sensually for the male gaze. Using veils in performances reiterates this: sashaying a veil under one’s heavily-painted eyes is done to entice and enchant, and is associated with the traditional face veils that upper-class (and thus inaccessible) Turkish, Egyptian, and Iranian women used to wear before (or during) colonization.

The problem is that belly dancing is permeated will all of these negative Orientalist dancing harem girl images. Can one belly dance without the coins, the henna, and/or swords? I think so. A long time ago, it was all about the scarf tied around the hips. It’s not flashy, but it’s sincere.



7 Comments

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Mon, December 3, 2007 - 6:43 AM
I have an idea about how she feels. When I tell someone in the US that I am from Spain, I am pretty sure that what comes to his/her mind first is (in no particular order): bullfighting, sangria, paella and flamenco. I am quite sure nobody thinks about El Prado Museum, Cervantes or Santiago Ramon y Cajal. Does that mean that our culture is only that? Of course not.
When you find somebody that asks about your culture is inevitable to think about cliches. Why? As this person points out, because they sell. And yes, I am sure there are lots of not Spanish flamenco dancers with stages names such as Carmen or Maria. Does that bother me? No. Do I think it's somehow silly? Yes. But I am not telling that to the dancer. Because I know it sells. Nobody wants to see a flamenco dancer with a stage name such as Rebecca, Jean or William.
I find pretty that someone finds my heritage interesting enough to learn a local form of dancing and share it with somebody else. Maybe because of the dancing he/she will be enough interested in my culture to explore it a little more, and find out that the man who discover the two ways blood moves around the body (heart-lungs-heart, and heart-rest of the body-heart) was from Spain. He was called Miguel Servet.
Tue, December 4, 2007 - 4:21 AM
As I was told by Cindy, dance is different for each person. You take from it what you need. Therefore, to some it is an exercise and nothing more, and to others it becomes very spiritual - personal. I think the original writer is not very secure in who she is as a person. We all come from different backgrounds and in one way or another have had to deal with cliches about our backgrounds. Is it annoying sometimes, yes!!! But do those cliches truly make us who we are, no!!!!! I belive that if someone truly is interested in learning about dance or any other subject and asks someone that may know something about that subject sincerely, then that person should answer and explain to the best of their ability. Maybe the original writer should take that into consideration.
Wed, December 5, 2007 - 10:25 AM
good point Denise...
Thu, December 6, 2007 - 9:35 AM
I think instead of getting mad, she should take that opportunity to educate the person she's talking to about her culture.
Thu, December 6, 2007 - 10:04 AM
I also think she should not attend performances that offend her. Every time I read this, I just get upset again. For some reason, her post feels small minded and judgemental to me. But I'm not sure why I am reacting that way.....
Tue, May 6, 2008 - 1:37 PM
hhmm...
And when people think of America I am sure its Apple Pie, Baseball, rednecks, fighing in other peoples war and celebrities. Of which all has nothing to do with my american culture.

And yes, I am sure there have been many American dancers - (ahem strippers) that has taken on my real name "Heather" as their stage name. No insult taken on my account. Taking upon a name is not saying you are that culture or even that person. Lots do it for safety from stakers and basically it is a way to become someone else when you are on stage. Celebrities take stage names all the time. Especially foreign ones trying to make a go at american interest, to fit into the hollywood culture.

It seems she has more of an issue with Cabaret style dancing then Tribal style dancing. So they may not of put sequins on their clothing to dance in the middle east in the past..but I guarantee they used coins and mirrors. Or maybe all the antique fabrics and banjera pieces I have in my dressing room are all LIES!!!!


"Middle Eastern women are acquiescing sexual props and Middle Eastern men are brutal and dangerous."

I have never thought of my sword being a sexual prop. That is just silly (plus its way to sharp :0) nor are Middle Eastern Men regarded in performances as brutal or dangerous. Where the "F" did that observation come from?

Since beginning to dance I guarantee what it does is make you research that culture more and to be more aware of it. And more a part of it. And even tend to support and defend it if necessary. So we may not of been born in the middle east but that does not mean we are not given permission to adopt the styles or culture of it as we see fit.

So maybe you think that the Middle East made a mistake of using these images to attract paying tourists to their countries?? I have much much documentation of bellydancers and snake charmers and henna artist and all stereotypical "middle east" images promoted in there country to attact the finances of the audiance for many many many decades. So who really is the one in the wrong here? The middle east for promoting a style that as you say isn't theirs for the american dollar or the americans that buy into it.

Its a two way street. And prejudice narrow mindedness also goes both ways.


Tue, May 6, 2008 - 1:50 PM
sorry...
don't know why it posted twice..so lame.