The Activism of Dance Performance in Appalachia: Utilizing the Arts to Address Social and Environmental Crisis and Injustice in the Mountains Cover Image
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The Activism of Dance Performance in Appalachia: Utilizing the Arts to Address Social and Environmental Crisis and Injustice in the Mountains
The Activism of Dance Performance in Appalachia: Utilizing the Arts to Address Social and Environmental Crisis and Injustice in the Mountains

Author(s): Theresa L. Burriss
Subject(s): Theatre, Dance, Performing Arts, Visual Arts, Comparative Study of Literature, Environmental and Energy policy, Studies in violence and power, Health and medicine and law, Family and social welfare, Environmental interactions, Migration Studies, American Literature
Published by: Editura Universitatii LUCIAN BLAGA din Sibiu
Keywords: Central Appalachia, dance/theater; social crisis; environmental crisis; single-industry domination; mountaintop removal coalmining; outmigration; black lung disease;

Summary/Abstract: For well over a century, the human and more-than-human of Central Appalachia have endured oppression and exploitation, primarily due to natural resource extraction. In spring 2008, the author led a dark tour to a mountaintop removal coalmining site in Southern West Virginia for colleagues, which included Dance Professor Deborah McLaughlin. As a result, the two collaborated on three evening-length dance/theater works highlighting social and environmental crises and injustices in the region. The performances incorporated contemporary dance, poetry, the spoken word, and the visual arts, as well as contemporary and traditional music. The first, Eating Appalachia: Selling Out to the Hungry Ghost, focused on mountaintop removal coalmining and its environmental and cultural destruction. With Sounds of Stories Dancing, the duo paid homage to millions of mountain residents forced to leave the region to find stable employment, despite longing to remain. In the final piece, The Shadow Waltz, they honored the lives of coalminers with black lung disease, as well as their families. This essay discusses the challenges of creating art that critiques socially constructed messages portrayed as given truths, as well as the educational and social successes of daring to dance truth to power.

  • Issue Year: 2022
  • Issue No: 39
  • Page Range: 143-167
  • Page Count: 25
  • Language: English