Anthropology of the Performing Arts

Artistry, Virtuosity, and Interpretation in Cross-Cultural Perspective

By (author) Anya Peterson Royce

Publication date:

17 May 2004

Length of book:

272 pages

Publisher

AltaMira Press

ISBN-13: 9780759102231

Anya Peterson Royce turns the anthropological gaze on the performing arts, attempting to find broad commonalities in performance, art, and artists across space, time, and culture. She asks general questions as to the nature of artistic interpretation, the differences between virtuosity and artistry, and how artists interplay with audience, aesthetics, and style. To support her case, she examines artists as diverse as Fokine and the Ballets Russes, Tewa Indian dancers, 17th century commedia dell'arte, Japanese kabuki and butoh, Zapotec shamans, and the mime of Marcel Marceau, adding her own observations as a professional dancer in the classical ballet tradition. Royce also points to the recent move toward collaboration across artistic genres as evidence of the universality of aesthetics. Her analysis leads to a better understanding of artistic interpretation, artist-audience relationships, and the artistic imagination as cross-cultural phenomena. Over 29 black and white photographs and drawings illustrate the wide range of Royce's cross-cultural approach. Her well-crafted volume will be of great interest to anthropologists, arts researchers, and students of cultural studies and performing arts.
Anya Royce was a ballet dancer before becoming a skilled ethnographer. Later she apprenticed herself as a musician. All of this combines to make Anthropology of the Performing Arts a must for ethnographers who study dance, mime, music, theatre or ritual or for those who look at cross cultural communication. Royce analyzes how performers learn their craft and come to embody basic skills, with some acquiring virtuosity and others moving on to the artistry that holds us spellbound, and then identifies commonalities of performance across cultures and across genres within culture that underlie the codified and metaphorical vocabularies through which the performer reaches out to us, the audience. Now that she has made these explicit it is possible to engage at a deeper level with what is happening on stage or in the rituals of daily life.