Presenters
Fernando Valerio-Holguin
Abstract
In 1994, a ballroom dance program for 5th graders was implemented in New York public schools. By 2005, more than 6,000 kids from 60 schools in Manhattan, Queens, and Brooklyn were required to take this 10-week course. The very same year, Marilyn Agrelo directed the documentary Mad Hot Ballroom Dance (2005). The documentary tells the story of the preparation, instruction and rehearsal of various school teams for the Colors of the Rainbows final competition.
New York is one of the most multicultural states in the United States with the student population coming from different countries and backgrounds. There are Dominicans, Cubans, Puertorricans, European-Americans, African-Americans, and Asian-Americans. Through the music used in this Public School program (merengue, tango, rumba and swing), students find an outlet to their feelings, and a way to “construct their subjectivities”, as Charles Keil would suggest. Moreover, dance helps them create social bonds and a “meaningful cooperative relationships between groups”. It is through dance that, a public school become the space of alterity or paratopia; a Korean boy dances a tango with a Dominican girl, whereas a Jewish-American boy dances a merengue with an African-American girl. In this presentation I will argue, among other things, that the ballroom dance program teaches students from different races, religions, and cultural backgrounds not only how to dance but also how to mingle and interact, thus reinforcing the possibility of a greater multicultural integration.