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@article{ Cresswell2006,
 title = {‘You cannot shake that shimmie here’: producing mobility                on the dance floor},
 author = {Cresswell, Tim},
 journal = {Cultural Geographies},
 number = {1},
 pages = {55-77},
 volume = {13},
 year = {2006},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.1191/1474474006eu350oa},
 urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-232706},
 abstract = {This paper examines the regulation of ballroom dancing in England in the first four                decades of the 20th century. It demonstrates how various forms of dance considered                to be ‘American’, particularly the ‘shimmy’,                were labelled as degenerate and threatening, and how the newly formed Imperial                Society for Teachers of Dancing and the dance master and band leader Victor                Silvester sought to produce a thoroughly regulated and encoded                ‘English’ style of ballroom dancing. The paper charts the                various strategies of representation and standardization that were used to enact                this regulation of corporeal mobility. Theoretically the paper argues for an                interpretive approach to bodily movement that considers bodily movement in the                context of wider contexts of cultural geographies of mobility. In so doing it                contributes to a growing body of work on the politics of mobility in the modern West                and, particularly, the cultural politics of dance.},
}