Erotic Triangles
Sundanese Dance and Masculinity in West Java
Erotic Triangles
Sundanese Dance and Masculinity in West Java
In West Java, Indonesia, all it takes is a woman’s voice and a drum beat to make a man get up and dance. Every day, men there—be they students, pedicab drivers, civil servants, or businessmen—breach ordinary standards of decorum and succumb to the rhythm at village ceremonies, weddings, political rallies, and nightclubs. The music the men dance to varies from traditional gong ensembles to the contemporary pop known as dangdut, but they consistently dance with great enthusiasm. In Erotic Triangles, Henry Spiller draws on decades of ethnographic research to explore the reasons behind this phenomenon, arguing that Sundanese men use dance to explore and enact contradictions in their gender identities.
Framing the three crucial elements of Sundanese dance—the female entertainer, the drumming, and men’s sense of freedom—as a triangle, Spiller connects them to a range of other theoretical perspectives, drawing on thinkers from Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick, Lévi-Strauss, and Freud to Euclid. By granting men permission to literally perform their masculinity, Spiller ultimately concludes, dance provides a crucial space for both reinforcing and resisting orthodox gender ideologies.
264 pages | 8 halftones, 9 musical examples, 14 line drawings, 13 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2010
Chicago Studies in Ethnomusicology
Anthropology: Cultural and Social Anthropology
Asian Studies: South Asia
Music: Ethnomusicology
Reviews
Table of Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Chapter 1. Discourses of Sundanese Dance
Chapter 2. Drumming and Power
Chapter 3. Ronggeng and Desire
Chapter 4. Dance Events and Freedom
Chapter 5. The Erotic Triangle of Sundanese Dance
Chapter 6. Triangulating Sundanese Dance
Notes
Reference List
Index
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