Don't Think, Dear: On Loving and Leaving Ballet

Don't Think, Dear: On Loving and Leaving Ballet

Alice Robb
Our Price:  £5.99
List Price:  £16.99
Saving Of:  65%

Availability:  

  

In stock

Author:  Alice Robb
Condition:  Used, Very Good
Format:  Hardback
Pages:  304
Publisher:  Oneworld Publications
Year:  2023
ISBN:  9780861542345

Condition notes:
the back of the dustjacket has a tear of nearly 2 cm; otherwise new and unread

'Don't think, dear' said Balanchine. 'Just do.'

For centuries, being a ballerina has been synonymous with being beautiful, thin, obedient and feminine. It is the crucible of womanhood, together with the harassment, physical abuse and eating disorders endemic at top schools. Can we abide this in a post #MeToo world?

Weaving together her own time at America's most elite ballet school with the lives of renowned ballerinas throughout history, Alice Robb interrogates what it means to perform ballet today. She confronts the all-consuming nature of the form: the obsessive and dangerous practices to perfect the body, the embrace of submission and the idealisation of suffering.

Yet ballet also gifts its dancers 'brains in their toes', a way to fully inhabit their bodies and a sanctuary of control away from the pressures of the outside world. Perhaps it is time to reimagine its liberating potential.

You may also like
Don't Think, Dear: On Loving and Leaving Ballet
Alice Robb
Condition: New
£10.99   £6.99

Can ballet ever be reconciled with feminist ideals?


Don't Think, Dear: On Loving and Leaving Ballet
Alice Robb
Condition: New
£16.99   £8.45

Can ballet ever be reconciled with feminist ideals?


Loving and Leaving Washington: Reflections on Public Service
John Yochelson
Condition: Used, Very Good
£15.20

John Yochelson was seventeen when he first heard President Kennedy's call, "Ask not what your country can do for you; ask what you can do for your country." Responding to the call to public service, he had afront-row seat from the mid-1970s through the mid-1990s. This is his inside account of the lives of public servants from the perspective of a lifelong moderate.