I've noticed something interesting in the process of compiling Contra Syncretist that has left me a bit puzzled. It seems that gender-free contra dances, which have existed for something like 30-40 years, are being broadly lumped in with techno contras. 

While both techno contras and gender-free dances challenge specific assumptions of "traditional contra dance" (and thus do probably count as syncretism in a broad sense), the two underlying assumptions are qualitatively different. Gender-free contras challenge the heteronormative idea of men only dancing with women and women only dancing with men, and of the roles' definition coming from the gender of the person dancing it. Techno contras, on the other hand, tend to define themselves by changing the music, usually through adding some sort of electronic element (usually involving prerecording at least some of the music).

The main reason that so far I haven't included more coverage of the gender-free contra scene is that I haven't been to a whole lot of those events. (They don't tend to happen as dedicated events in DC that I'm aware of, although role-swapping does happen in the breach, by necessity or volition.) That said, I don't understand why the two sorts of events get lumped together, New York City's gender-free techno contra dances notwithstanding. It seems to me that "they change some aspect of the traditional assumption" is a really, really broad brush and shortchanges the importance of examining each of those assumptions individually and why they're part of the living Tradition.

If someone else can see a more coherent reason, I'm certainly open to discussion and welcome your thoughts.
 
 
This week we've got another really easy flourish for dancing switch, where you change roles back and forth with your partner through the figures or iterations of a given dance. This is also a good flourish to have up your sleeve in case you performed one too many roll-away flourishes on a set of Petronella turns leading up to a California twirl and are accidentally reversed going into the last move.
You, too, can have flourishes featured! Drop me a line!

Happy Friday!

Carry on Dancing,

CS
 
 
While one way of mixing things up in contra dancing is to change the music, another is a bit more subtle, but still can make for an interesting experiment: dancing the “other” gender role, or switching roles as you go up or down the line. I’ve found that as someone who normally dances as a follow, dancing as a lead or dancing switch to be a lot of fun, and I know several other people do too, and not solely as a coping mechanism when there is a gender imbalance or when the dance is formally billed as being gender-free.

There’s been some talk about the whole “lead” versus “follow” and whether or not these things even really should exist in someone’s Platonic ideal of contra, and the sociological implications of that which at least somewhat go beyond the purview of this blog. However, I’ve found some dancers who have interesting things to say about the mindset and the sensibilities that go with dancing the “other” role.
 
 
This week we continue our foray into dancing switch, covering some of Steve's favorite ways to trade back the lead. No follows were harmed in the making of this video, nor should they be while dancing switch.

Please send in your flourishes! You too could be featured on this blog!

Happy Friday.

CS