From Quebradita to Duranguense

From Quebradita to Duranguense

$55.00

In stock
0 out of 5

$55.00

SKU: 9780816525362 Categories: , , ,
Title Range Discount
Trade Discount 5 + 25%

Description

Salsa and merengue are now so popular that they are household words for Americans of all ethnic backgrounds. Recent media attention is helping other Caribbean music styles like bachata to attain a similar status. Yet popular Mexican American dances remain unknown and invisible to most non-Latinos. Quebradita, meaning “little break,” is a modern Mexican American dance style that became hugely popular in Los Angeles and across the southwestern United States during the early to mid 1990s. Over the decade of its popularity, this dance craze offered insights into the social and cultural experience of Mexican American youth. Accompanied by banda, an energetic brass band music style, quebradita is recognizable by its western clothing, hat tricks, and daring flips. The dance’s combination of Mexican, Anglo, and African American influences represented a new sensibility that appealed to thousands of young people. Hutchinson argues that, though short-lived, the dance filled political and sociocultural functions, emerging as it did in response to the anti-immigrant and English-only legislation that was then being enacted in California. Her fieldwork and interviews yield rich personal testimony as to the inner workings of the quebradita’s aesthetic development and social significance. The emergence of pasito duranguense, a related yet distinct style originating in Chicago, marks the evolution of the Mexican American youth dance scene. Like the quebradita before it, pasito duranguense has picked up the task of demonstrating the relevance of regional Mexican music and dance within the U.S. context.
“The quebradita story is rich in issues of cultural differences across Mexican American and Mexican cultural subgroups based on nationality, region, generation, and gender. The closer look at cultural and social processes that Hutchinson offers draws us into the deeper vectors that come to bear on the creation and practice of the dance and the broader and subtle meanings that the dance expresses.” —Daniel E. Sheehy, Smithsonian Institution

Additional information

Dimensions 1 × 6 × 9 in